wandering17
Member
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2014
- Messages
- 81
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2015
How do i prove this identity?
cos(A-B)-cos(A+B) / Sin(A+B) +Sin(A-B) = TanB
cos(A-B)-cos(A+B) / Sin(A+B) +Sin(A-B) = TanB
just try it by looking at ur notes and textbook then show us ur working out.. then we will see.show me please?
I hope you dont take this to offence but are you familiar with compound angles ( the identities ).show me please?
Watch your order of operations on top line.yeh
cosAcosB + SinAsinB - (CosAcosB - SinAsinB)
-------------------------------------------------
SinAcosB+CosAsinB + SinAcosB-CosAsinB
Top line, don't they just all cancel out? then im left with the bottom of 2sinAcosB
then how do i get to tanB
top line, last term, should be plus sign instead of minusyeh
cosAcosB + SinAsinB - CosAcosB - SinAsinB
-------------------------------------------------
SinAcosB+CosAsinB + SinAcosB-CosAsinB
Top line, don't they just all cancel out? then im left with the bottom of 2sinAcosB
then how do i get to tanB
oooohhh. Thanks, my badtop line, last term, should be plus sign instead of minus
BE CAREFUL (order of operations) + --> - (+ on top)---(- on bottom)yeh
cosAcosB + SinAsinB - CosAcosB - SinAsinB
-------------------------------------------------
SinAcosB+CosAsinB + SinAcosB-CosAsinB
Top line, don't they just all cancel out? then im left with the bottom of 2sinAcosB
then how do i get to tanB
in that identity, put theta=15 degreeI have another question... if anyone could please help me, idk how to approach the question at all?
Use the identity cos2theta = 1-2sin^2theta to find sin^2 15
How do i start this?