Proving Trig Identities: Tan x Sec^4x = Tan x Sec^2x + Tan^3x Sec^2x

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The discussion focuses on proving the trigonometric identity tan x sec^4 x ≡ tan x sec^2 x + tan^3 x sec^2 x. Participants share their attempts, with one approach simplifying tan x sec^4 x to sin x/cos^5 x but encountering difficulties. Another attempt expands the right side using the identity tan^2 x = sec^2 x - 1, which seems promising but lacks clarity on how to incorporate sec terms. The conversation emphasizes the importance of known identities and suggests exploring both sides of the equation for a clearer solution path. The overall goal remains to demonstrate the equivalence of the two expressions using trigonometric identities.
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Homework Statement



Show that:

$$\tan x\sec^4x\equiv\tan x\sec^2x + \tan^3x\sec^2x$$

Homework Equations



Trig identities / formulae

The Attempt at a Solution



I've got 2 different starts for it but I'm stuck after a few steps with both of them:

Attempt 1:

$$\tan x \sec^4 x$$
$$\frac{\tan x}{\cos^4 x}$$
$$\frac{\frac{\sin x}{\cos x}}{\cos^4 x}$$
$$\frac{\sin x \cos^4 x}{\cos x}$$
$$\sin x \cos^3 x$$

And then I can't think on anything else for this one.

Attempt 2:

$$\tan x \sec^4 x$$
$$\tan x (\tan^2 x + 1)^2$$
$$\tan x (\tan^4 x + 2\tan^2 x + 1)$$
$$\tan^5 x + 2\tan^3 x + \tan x$$

This one looks a bit closer since its got the higher power tans in it but I can't see where to get the sec terms from?
 
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trollcast said:

Homework Statement



Show that:

$$\tan x\sec^4x\equiv\tan x\sec^2x + \tan^3x\sec^2x$$

Fastest way: split the second term up to ##\displaystyle \tan x\tan^2x\sec^2x##, then use the identity ##\displaystyle \tan^2x = \sec^2x - 1##.
 
Curious3141 said:
Fastest way: split the second term up to ##\displaystyle \tan x\tan^2x\sec^2x##, then use the identity ##\displaystyle \tan^2x = \sec^2x - 1##.

How do you get that for the second term as there's nothing like it in our formula books?
 
trollcast said:
How do you get that for the second term as there's nothing like it in our formula books?
If it's not in there, it should be. Certainly you know this one:
sin2x + cos2x = 1

If you divide both sides of this equation by cos2x, you get:
tan2x + 1 = sec2x

If you divide both sides of the first identity by sin2x, you get:
1 + cot2x = csc2x

You should have the first of these memorized. The latter two you can derive quickly.
 
trollcast said:
How do you get that for the second term as there's nothing like it in our formula books?

##\displaystyle \sin^2x + \cos^2x = 1##. Divide throughout by ##\displaystyle \cos^2x##. Rearrange.

In fact, the tan-sec identify is a well-known one in its own right. So is the cot-cosec one, which you can derive by dividing the above equation by ##\displaystyle \sin^2x## instead of ##\displaystyle \cos^2x##.
 
trollcast said:

Homework Statement



Show that:

$$\tan x\sec^4x\equiv\tan x\sec^2x + \tan^3x\sec^2x$$

Homework Equations



Trig identities / formulae

The Attempt at a Solution



I've got 2 different starts for it but I'm stuck after a few steps with both of them:

Attempt 1:

$$\tan x \sec^4 x$$
$$\frac{\tan x}{\cos^4 x}$$
$$\frac{\frac{\sin x}{\cos x}}{\cos^4 x}$$
$$\frac{\sin x \cos^4 x}{\cos x}$$
This is wrong. It should be
\frac{sin(x)}{cos^5(x)}

$$\sin x \cos^3 x$$

And then I can't think on anything else for this one.

Attempt 2:

$$\tan x \sec^4 x$$
$$\tan x (\tan^2 x + 1)^2$$
$$\tan x (\tan^4 x + 2\tan^2 x + 1)$$
$$\tan^5 x + 2\tan^3 x + \tan x$$

This one looks a bit closer since its got the higher power tans in it but I can't see where to get the sec terms from?
Have you tried doing the same thing to the right side?
 
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Since ##px^9+q## is the factor, then ##x^9=\frac{-q}{p}## will be one of the roots. Let ##f(x)=27x^{18}+bx^9+70##, then: $$27\left(\frac{-q}{p}\right)^2+b\left(\frac{-q}{p}\right)+70=0$$ $$b=27 \frac{q}{p}+70 \frac{p}{q}$$ $$b=\frac{27q^2+70p^2}{pq}$$ From this expression, it looks like there is no greatest value of ##b## because increasing the value of ##p## and ##q## will also increase the value of ##b##. How to find the greatest value of ##b##? Thanks
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