Why are Cosine and Secant Even Functions?

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Cosine and secant are classified as even functions because they exhibit symmetry about the y-axis, meaning cos(-t) equals cos(t) and sec(-t) equals sec(t). This symmetry can be observed in their graphs, which mirror across the y-axis, unlike other trigonometric functions. The definition of cosine as the x-coordinate on the unit circle reinforces this property, as moving in the negative direction results in the same x-coordinate. Additionally, the power series expansion of cosine consists solely of even-powered terms, further confirming its even nature. Understanding these concepts clarifies why cosine and secant do not behave like odd functions.
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Homework Statement



Why is Cosin and Secant even? Cos (-t) = cos t, Sec (-t) = sec t
Why don't they equal - sec t instead like the rest of the functions? Thanks


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The Attempt at a Solution

 
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You could look at their graphs. Even functions have graphs that are symmetric at the y-axis -- what appears on the left side of the y-axis appears again as a "mirror" on the right side of the y-axis. The graphs of the rest of the trig functions do not exhibit this behavior.
 
Hmm I somewhat kind of get it now. Thanks a lot!
 
How, exactly, are you defining "cosine". Probably you are using something like "Given a number t, measure a distance t around the circumference of the unit circle, starting at (1, 0). cos(t) is the x coordinate of the ending point." From that it should be clear that if t> 0 takes you to the point (x, y), -t takes you to (x, -y). x= cos(t)= cos(-t), y= sin(t), -y= sin(-t).
 
The reason why cosine is an even functions is because if you expand cosine via power series you'll get polynomials that are only even: 1-X2/2!+X4/4!-X6/6!+X8/8!...
 
romsofia said:
The reason why cosine is an even functions is because if you expand cosine via power series you'll get polynomials that are only even: 1-X2/2!+X4/4!-X6/6!+X8/8!...

I don't think this is helpful to the OP, because, unless I'm mistaken, he/she hasn't seen power series yet.
 
eumyang said:
I don't think this is helpful to the OP, because, unless I'm mistaken, he/she hasn't seen power series yet.

I thought about that before posting, but I'm sure it'll be useful to see why it's really an even function.
 
In fact, it is possible to define cos(x) in terms of its Taylor series. For such a definition, romsofia's response is perfect. But we don't know what kind of response is appropriate until we know exactly how the OP is defining cosine and secant.
 
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