Why does 90 degrees equal arccot(300/1000)?

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The discussion centers around the confusion regarding the equation 90° = arcsec(300/1000) in a relativity textbook. Participants clarify that arcsec(x) is the angle whose secant equals x, but since cos(x) cannot exceed 1, arcsec(300/1000) is invalid as 300/1000 equals 0.3, which is less than 1. The correct interpretation suggests that the problem should reference arccotangent instead of arcsecant, leading to an angle of approximately 73.3 degrees. This highlights a potential error in the textbook. Understanding the distinction between arcsecant and arccotangent is crucial for solving the problem accurately.
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Hey everyone,

I have recently developed a strong interest in physics. To the point where I am changing my major from computer science to computational physics. Anyway, I am having a problem understanding a formula in a book I have on relativity. The problem is:
90\circ = arcsec(300/1000). Now I know some Trig. but I haven't done it in awhile and don't remember arcsec at all. Can anyone explain to me why that problem equals 90 degrees.

Thanks,
Daniel
 
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secx is equal to 1/cosx. arcsecx would then be equal to the angle that causes sec to equal x.

However, because cosx is always <= 1, then 1/cosx cannot be less than 1. Therefore, if 300/1000=3/10, arcsec(300/1000) shouldn't exist.
 
Math Jeans said:
secx is equal to 1/cosx. arcsecx would then be equal to the angle that causes sec to equal x.

However, because cosx is always <= 1, then 1/cosx cannot be less than 1. Therefore, if 300/1000=3/10, arcsec(300/1000) shouldn't exist.

That is was the conclusion I was coming up with also. Maybe I am misunderstanding the problem.
This is the exact problem from the book:http://books.google.com/books?id=fz...q9xmXR&sig=ZM6PZ9v6XRaqWad6pn9UxlufThQ&hl=en"
 
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The formula should say arccotangent, not arcsecant.
 
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