Solve Trigonometry Problem: Find the Value of a Series of Cosine Squared Terms"

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The discussion revolves around solving the trigonometric expression involving cosine squared terms: 1/cos²(10°) + 1/cos²(20°) + 1/cos²(40°) - 1/cos²(45°). Participants express confusion over calculating the cosine values without calculators or tables and debate whether an analytic solution is required. Suggestions include using trigonometric identities and Vieta's formulas to relate the angles to cubic equations, as the angles are not standard multiples. A proposed correction to the angles simplifies the problem, allowing for a clearer path to the solution. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the complexity of the problem and the need for a systematic approach to find the correct answer.
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Homework Statement



What is the value of ## \frac{1}{cos^2 10^{\circ}}+\frac{1}{cos^2 20^{\circ}}+\frac{1}{cos^2 40^{\circ}}-\frac{1}{cos^2 45^{\circ}} ## ?

A. 1
B. 5
C. 10
D. 15
E. 20

Homework Equations



cos^2 x + sin^2 x = 1
sin 2x = 2 sin x cos x
cos 2x = cos^2 x-sin^2 x

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
I'm only able to determine cos 45 degrees which is √2 / 2
I have no idea about cos 10, cos 20, and cos 40 degrees

Please help me
 
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Are you just expected to look up the cos values in the tables or is an analytic solution being asked for ?

Have you done any basic trigonometry in your classes ?
 
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Nidum said:
http://www.industrialpress.com/ext/StaticPages/Handbook/TrigPages/mh_trig.asp

Are you just expected to look up the cos values in the tables or is an analytic solution being asked for ?

Have you done any basic trigonometry in your classes ?

No calculators or tables are allowed in the test.
I have to do it using trigonometric identities, and formulas
 
Since it's a multiple choice test you only have to estimate the answer. So how far do you think are cos 40° and cos 45° apart? And where do cos 10° and cos 20° lie? Do you know the graph of cos? Are you sure about the possible answers?
 
terryds said:

Homework Statement



What is the value of ## \frac{1}{cos^2 10^{\circ}}+\frac{1}{cos^2 20^{\circ}}+\frac{1}{cos^2 40^{\circ}}-\frac{1}{cos^2 45^{\circ}} ## ?

A. 1
B. 5
C. 10
D. 15
E. 20
Are you supposed to give the range of that value? As in "between C and D" (just as an example).
Because none of these five values are anywhere close.

fresh_42 said:
Since it's a multiple choice test you only have to estimate the answer. So how far do you think are cos 40° and cos 45° apart? And where do cos 10° and cos 20° lie?
That works really good to get an estimate of the value.
 
Samy_A said:
Are you supposed to give the range of that value? As in "between C and D" (just as an example).
Because none of these five values are anywhere close.

That works really good to get an estimate of the value.
Hmm.. you're right.
It has no right option (in calculator I get 1.86)..
Sorry for posting this nonsense problem :(
 
Pity it is garbled, there is an interesting puzzle lurking behind it.
cos(40), cos(80) and -cos(20) are the three roots of 8x3-6x+1. If you change the cos(10) to cos(80) the sum gives 34.
 
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haruspex said:
Pity it is garbled, there is an interesting puzzle lurking behind it.
cos(40), cos(80) and -cos(20) are the three roots of 8x3-6x+1. If you change the cos(10) to cos(80) the sum gives 34.
Ok, I've found a correction that makes the problem work. Leave the 10 as is but change the 20 and 40 to 50 and 70. That yields one of the given answers.
 
haruspex said:
Ok, I've found a correction that makes the problem work. Leave the 10 as is but change the 20 and 40 to 50 and 70. That yields one of the given answers.
Very good haru !

Of course, that's the same as ##\displaystyle \ \frac{1}{\cos^2 10^{\circ}}+\frac{1}{\sin^2 20^{\circ}}+\frac{1}{\sin^2 40^{\circ}}-\frac{1}{\cos^2 45^{\circ}} \ ##.
 
  • #10
SammyS said:
Very good haru !

Of course, that's the same as ##\displaystyle \ \frac{1}{\cos^2 10^{\circ}}+\frac{1}{\sin^2 20^{\circ}}+\frac{1}{\sin^2 40^{\circ}}-\frac{1}{\cos^2 45^{\circ}} \ ##.
How true.
Terry, as a clue on how to approach such a problem...
Note that the given angles are awkward in the sense that they are not multiples of 3 degrees. So we need to relate them to angles which are. A very useful formula is ##\cos(3\theta)=4\cos^3(\theta)-3\cos(\theta)##. There's a similar one for sine.
Since the given angles are multiples of 10 degrees, that gives you cubic equations relating their cosines to well known cosines.
Using the corrected angles, you discover that all three satisfy the same cubic.
The next trick is to consider how the sum of the inverse squares of the roots of a cubic relates to the coefficients in the cubic.
 
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  • #11
haruspex said:
How true.
Terry, as a clue on how to approach such a problem...
Note that the given angles are awkward in the sense that they are not multiples of 3 degrees. So we need to relate them to angles which are. A very useful formula is ##\cos(3\theta)=4\cos^3(\theta)-3\cos(\theta)##. There's a similar one for sine.
Since the given angles are multiples of 10 degrees, that gives you cubic equations relating their cosines to well known cosines.
Using the corrected angles, you discover that all three satisfy the same cubic.
The next trick is to consider how the sum of the inverse squares of the roots of a cubic relates to the coefficients in the cubic.

Okay, so now the problem becomes

##
\frac{1}{cos^210^ \circ}+\frac{1}{cos^250^ \circ}+\frac{1}{cos^270^ \circ}-\frac{1}{cos^245^ \circ}
##

I still get stuck..
How do I use the formula ## cos (3\theta) = 4 cos ^3 (\theta) - 3 cos (\theta) ## ??

Neither 50 nor 70 are the triple of 10

Please tell me the steps to solve it, since I don't have any idea at all
 
  • #12
terryds said:
Okay, so now the problem becomes

##
\frac{1}{cos^210^ \circ}+\frac{1}{cos^250^ \circ}+\frac{1}{cos^270^ \circ}-\frac{1}{cos^245^ \circ}
##

I still get stuck..
How do I use the formula ## cos (3\theta) = 4 cos ^3 (\theta) - 3 cos (\theta) ## ??

Neither 50 nor 70 are the triple of 10

Please tell me the steps to solve it, since I don't have any idea at all
cos(3*50°)=?
cos(3*70°)=?
 
  • #13
Samy_A said:
cos(3*50°)=?
cos(3*70°)=?

cos (3*50) = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)

cos(3*70°)= 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)

cos (3*10) = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)

Then, I still don't get the idea..
How to get cos(50), cos(70) and cos(10) ? It's a cubic function..
And, at first I think cos(50) equals to cos(70) due to the same cos(3x), but they're different..
Please help
 
  • #14
terryds said:
cos (3*50) = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)

cos(3*70°)= 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)

cos (3*10) = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)

Then, I still don't get the idea..
How to get cos(50), cos(70) and cos(10) ? It's a cubic function..
And, at first I think cos(50) equals to cos(70) due to the same cos(3x), but they're different..
Please help
The idea is not to solve the cubic equation, but to use properties of sums/products (and combinations thereof) of its roots.
I made use of Vieta's formulas, and some more computations. There may well be an easier way that escaped me.
 
  • #15
terryds said:
cos (3*50) = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)

cos(3*70°)= 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)

cos (3*10) = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)

Then, I still don't get the idea..
How to get cos(50), cos(70) and cos(10) ? It's a cubic function..
And, at first I think cos(50) equals to cos(70) due to the same cos(3x), but they're different..
Please help
Yes, in my post #30 I missed a step out.
You need the cosines to be the three roots of the same cubic, but the three cubics you found are not quite the same.
Since the cosines are all squared in the target formula, cos(50) will be equivalent to -cos(50)=cos(130) etc. That works, because 3*130=390=360+30, giving the same cubic as for cos(10). Do the same to find a substitute for 70.
As you say, the cosines of 10, 130 and the third angle are all different, but they satisfy the same cubic, so they must be the three roots of that cubic.
Having done that, our target expression, the sum of the inverses of the squares of those cosines, is a-2+b-2+c-2 where a, b and c are all roots of the cubic 4x3-3x-cos(30)=0.
In general, if a cubic is px3+qx2+rx+s=0, there are several simple formulae relating the roots to the coefficients. s/p=abc, for example. Using these, can you find a way to express a-2+b-2+c-2 in terms of p, q, r and s?
 
  • #16
haruspex said:
Yes, in my post #30 I missed a step out.
You need the cosines to be the three roots of the same cubic, but the three cubics you found are not quite the same.
Since the cosines are all squared in the target formula, cos(50) will be equivalent to -cos(50)=cos(130) etc. That works, because 3*130=390=360+30, giving the same cubic as for cos(10). Do the same to find a substitute for 70.
As you say, the cosines of 10, 130 and the third angle are all different, but they satisfy the same cubic, so they must be the three roots of that cubic.
Having done that, our target expression, the sum of the inverses of the squares of those cosines, is a-2+b-2+c-2 where a, b and c are all roots of the cubic 4x3-3x-cos(30)=0.
In general, if a cubic is px3+qx2+rx+s=0, there are several simple formulae relating the roots to the coefficients. s/p=abc, for example. Using these, can you find a way to express a-2+b-2+c-2 in terms of p, q, r and s?
cos (3*50) = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)

cos(3*70)= 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)

cos(3*170)= 4 cos^3(170) - 3 cos(170)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(170) - 3 cos(170)

4x^3 - 3x + √3 / 2 = 0
Which means that I can apply Vieta's Formula to get all the sums or products of cos(50), cos(70), or cos(170)

cos (3*10) = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)

cos (3 *110) = 4 cos^3(110) - 3 cos(110)
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(110) - 3 cos(110)

cos (3*130) = 4 cos^3(130) - 3 cos(130)
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(130) - 3 cos(130)

4x^3 - 3x - √3 / 2 = 0
Which means that I can apply Vieta's Formula to get all the sums or products of cos(10), cos(110), or cos(130)

But, cos 10, cos 50, and cos 70 is not roots of the same equation.. I can't get the products nor the sums using Vieta..
Please help.. I still don't get it
 
  • #17
terryds said:
But, cos 10, cos 50, and cos 70 is not roots of the same equation.. I can't get the products nor the sums using Vieta..
Please help.. I still don't get it
I'm confused too.

You had (I clipped part of the post):
terryds said:
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(50) - 3 cos(50)
- √3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(70) - 3 cos(70)
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)
Look at the cubic equation 4x³-3x+√3 / 2=0. What you have are the three roots of that equation: cos(50), cos(70) and -cos(10).
Only squares appear in the expression to solve, so the minus in -cos(10) is not a problem.
 
  • #18
terryds said:
But, cos 10, cos 50, and cos 70 is not roots of the same equation..
As I posted
haruspex said:
Since the cosines are all squared in the target formula, cos(50) will be equivalent to -cos(50)=cos(130) etc. That works, because 3*130=390=360+30, giving the same cubic as for cos(10).
So you can change the cos(50) and cos(70) in the target expression to -cos(50)=cos(130) and -cos(70)=cos(110).
 
  • #19
haruspex said:
As I posted

So you can change the cos(50) and cos(70) in the target expression to -cos(50)=cos(130) and -cos(70)=cos(110).

cos (3*10) = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(10) - 3 cos(10)

cos (3 *110) = 4 cos^3(110) - 3 cos(110) ... (which is the same as -cos(70))
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(110) - 3 cos(110)

cos (3*130) = 4 cos^3(130) - 3 cos(130) ... (which is the same as - cos(50))
√3 / 2 = 4 cos^3(130) - 3 cos(130)

4x^3 - 3x - √3 / 2 = 0

cos 10 (- cos 50 )(- cos 70) = √3 / 8
(cos 10 (- cos 50 )(- cos 70) )^2 = 3/64

Since (cos 50)^2 = (-cos 50)^2 and (cos 70)^2 = (-cos 70)^2, then

cos^2 10 cos^2 50 + cos^2 50 cos^2 70 + cos^2 70 cos^2 10
= cos^2 10 (- cos 50)^2 + (-cos 50)^2 (-cos 70)^2 + (-cos 70)^2 cos^2 10
= (- cos 10 cos 50 + cos 50 cos 70 - cos 70 cos 10)^2 - 2 (- cos 10 cos 50 + cos 50 cos 70 - cos 70 cos 10)
= (-3/4)^2 - 2(-3/4)
= (9/16) + (3/2)
= (33/16)

So the answer I get is

## \frac{\frac{33}{16}}{\frac{3}{64}} - \frac{1}{cos^2(45^\circ))} = 44 - 2 = 42 ##

But, it doesn't yield any of the options :(
Please tell me where I got wrong..
 
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  • #20
terryds said:
cos^2 10 cos^2 50 + cos^2 50 cos^2 70 + cos^2 70 cos^2 10
= cos^2 10 (- cos 50)^2 + (-cos 50)^2 (-cos 70)^2 + (-cos 70)^2 cos^2 10
= (- cos 10 cos 50 + cos 50 cos 70 - cos 70 cos 10)^2 - 2 (- cos 10 cos 50 + cos 50 cos 70 - cos 70 cos 10)
Verify this formula.

It may be easier just to work with symbols: compute (xy+yz+zx)² and see what it gives.

And don't worry about the signs. In the end you will use Vieta's formulas, not the values of the roots.
 
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  • #21
terryds said:
= (- cos 10 cos 50 + cos 50 cos 70 - cos 70 cos 10)^2 - 2 (- cos 10 cos 50 + cos 50 cos 70 - cos 70 cos 10)
You dropped some powers of two in the last expression in parentheses. As Samy suggests, it will be easier to execute this algebra symbolically.
 
  • #22
haruspex said:
You dropped some powers of two in the last expression in parentheses. As Samy suggests, it will be easier to execute this algebra symbolically.

x = (-cos 10)
y = cos 50
z = cos 70

(xy+yz+zx)^2 = (xy+yz+zx)(xy+yz+zx) = (xy)^2+(yz)^2 + (zx)^2 + 2 ( x y^2 z + x^2 y z + x y z^2 )

So,

(xy)^2+(yz)^2 + (zx)^2
= (xy+yz+zx)^2 - 2 ( x y*y z + x y*x z + x z* y z )
= (xy+yz+zx)^2 - 2 (xyz)(x+y+z)
= (-3/4)^2 - 2 (√3 / 8)(0)
= 9/16

So the answer I get is 10

## \frac{\frac{9}{16}}{\frac{3}{64}} - 2 = 12 - 2 = 10 ##
Right ?

Thanks for helping me with this problem so far :smile::smile::smile:
 
  • #23
terryds said:
x = (-cos 10)
y = cos 50
z = cos 70

(xy+yz+zx)^2 = (xy+yz+zx)(xy+yz+zx) = (xy)^2+(yz)^2 + (zx)^2 + 2 ( x y^2 z + x^2 y z + x y z^2 )

So,

(xy)^2+(yz)^2 + (zx)^2
= (xy+yz+zx)^2 - 2 ( x y*y z + x y*x z + x z* y z )
= (xy+yz+zx)^2 - 2 (xyz)(x+y+z)
= (-3/4)^2 - 2 (√3 / 8)(0)
= 9/16

So the answer I get is 10

## \frac{\frac{9}{16}}{\frac{3}{64}} - 2 = 12 - 2 = 10 ##
Right ?

Thanks for helping me with this problem so far :smile::smile::smile:
That's it!
 
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