Trig problem cos (arctan 5/12)

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the cosine of the angle represented by arctan(5/12) without using a calculator. Participants explore trigonometric relationships and the construction of a right triangle to derive the answer.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss drawing a right triangle with sides 5 and 12 to find the hypotenuse and use trigonometric definitions. Some question the correctness of their derived ratio of 12/13 and whether trigonometric ratios have units.

Discussion Status

The discussion includes various approaches to the problem, with some participants confirming the ratio of 12/13 as correct. There is an exploration of alternative methods that avoid triangle construction, suggesting a broader understanding of trigonometric identities.

Contextual Notes

Participants mention constraints regarding the use of calculators and discuss the nature of trigonometric ratios being dimensionless.

jacy
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I have to calculate this without using the calculator.
cos (arctan 5/12)

So far i draw a triangle and i have the opposite side to be 5, adjacent to be 12, and hypotenuse to be 13. Please suggest me some hint, thanks.
 
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Once you have drawn the triangle it is easy. Mark the angle represented by ArcTan \frac 5 {12}

then use the definition of the cos of that angle to get your answer.
 
Integral said:
Once you have drawn the triangle it is easy. Mark the angle represented by ArcTan \frac 5 {12}

then use the definition of the cos of that angle to get your answer.

am getting 12/13, am i correct
 
jacy said:
am getting 12/13, am i correct

Correct. BTW, if you're allowed access to a calculator, you can use that to verify your answer (even if you're not allowed to use the calc to derive the answer).
 
Curious3141 said:
Correct. BTW, if you're allowed access to a calculator, you can use that to verify your answer (even if you're not allowed to use the calc to derive the answer).


Thanks, should the unit be the length of the sides, since 12/13 is not an angle.
 
jacy said:
Thanks, should the unit be the length of the sides, since 12/13 is not an angle.

No, trig ratios have no unit. You're dividing a length by a length, so they're dimensionless.
 
Just for another take on this problem (I find the construction of a rt triangle a bit cumbersome) we could use basic trig. results.

For eg, if you have to do something like cos(arctan(x))
we can proceed by taking arctan(x)=y
so x=tan(y)
\frac{1}{\sqrt{1+x^2}} = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1+tan^2y}} = cos(y)<br /> or y=arccos(\frac{1}{\sqrt{1+x^2}})
So cos(arctan(x)) = cos(y) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1+x^2}})
which gives the answer.This approach works for all such problems.
No messy triangles.

Arun
 
Thanks everyone for helping me out.
 

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