Understanding the Cosine Inverse Function and the Cast Rule

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The discussion focuses on the properties of the cosine inverse function and its relation to the CAST rule. The cosine inverse function, defined on the interval [0, π), is always positive for acute angles, as cosine values are positive in this range. When cosine is negative, the corresponding angles lie in the third or fourth quadrants. The domain of the inverse cosine function is restricted to [-1, 1], mapping these values to [0, π]. Overall, cosine inverse does not follow the CAST rule in the same way as the cosine function itself.
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I am currently doing a trig question and trying to find the location of the acute angles of cosine inverse and I am just wondering if cosine inverse follow the cast rule? In other words would it be positive where cos would be positive or not?
 
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hi chiuda! :smile:
chiuda said:
I am currently doing a trig question and trying to find the location of the acute angles of cosine inverse and I am just wondering if cosine inverse follow the cast rule? In other words would it be positive where cos would be positive or not?

for acute angles (even for negative ones), cos is always positve :confused:

(and cos-1 is usually defined to have its principal value, which is defined to be in [0,π), and therefore is positive anyway)
 
Related acute angle sorry. If cos is neg then it must be in quadrant 3 or 4.
 
Right?
 
chiuda said:
Related acute angle sorry. If cos is neg then it must be in quadrant 3 or 4.

The restricted domain for the cosine function (sometimes written as Cos) is, as tiny-tim said, [0, ## \pi##]. This is the range of the inverse cosine function (cos-1). The domain for the inverse cosine function is [-1, 1]. This function maps a number in the interval [-1, 1] to a number in the interval [0, ## \pi##]. Except for 0, all the other values are positive.
 
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