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Priming

1) The document provides a summary of trigonometric concepts including trigonometric ratios, special angle values, identities, sum and difference formulas, inverse trig functions, and laws of sines and cosines. 2) It includes 9 practice problems covering topics like trigonometric identities, sums of trig functions, and applications of trigonometric laws. 3) The document is intended as notes for a session on trigonometry, outlining key formulas and concepts to understand for solving problems.

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Loranel Espiritu
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
214 views3 pages

Priming

1) The document provides a summary of trigonometric concepts including trigonometric ratios, special angle values, identities, sum and difference formulas, inverse trig functions, and laws of sines and cosines. 2) It includes 9 practice problems covering topics like trigonometric identities, sums of trig functions, and applications of trigonometric laws. 3) The document is intended as notes for a session on trigonometry, outlining key formulas and concepts to understand for solving problems.

Uploaded by

Loranel Espiritu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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VCSMS PRIME

Program for Inducing Mathematical Excellence


Session 5: Trigonometry
September 28, 2017

Lecture problems
1. (AIME 1995/7) Given (1 + sin t)(1 + cos t) = 54 , find (1 − sin t)(1 − cos t).
2. (QI9) Evaluate the following sum: 1 + cos π3 + cos 2π 3π
3 + cos 3 + · · · + cos
2016π
3 .

3. (Huang1 ) Divide sin 3x (2 cos 2x − 1) by sin x (2 cos 4x + 1) and simplify.


cos 96◦ + sin 96◦
4. (AIME 1996/10) Find the smallest positive integer solution to tan 19x◦ = .
cos 96◦ − sin 96◦
5. (AI6) Find the exact value of tan−1 1
+ tan−1 1
+ tan−1 1
  
2 5 8 .
6. (Morrie’s Law) Simplify cos 20◦ cos 40◦ cos 80◦ .
7. Find the exact value of cos π/5.
8. (PEM 2016/10) Find the ratio of sin 1◦ + sin 2◦ + · · · + sin 44◦ to cos 1◦ + cos 2◦ + · · · + cos 44◦ .
9. (Stewart’s Theorem) In triangle ABC, point D is on line BC. Let AD = d, BD = m and CD = n.
Then man + dad = bmb + cnc.

As ratios of sides
• In terms of triangles: sine, cosine, tangent, secant, cosecant, cotangent, are ratios of sides. Example:
find tan α given sin α = 12 . This is the classical development in classroom math.
• Values for special angles: 30◦ , 45◦ , 60◦ can be derived from special right triangles 30◦ − 60◦ − 90◦
(equilateral triangle), and 45◦ − 45◦ − 90◦ (square). We can get 0◦ and 90◦ from reasoning.
• Identities: cofunctions, Pythagorean identities.
• Problem 1: Abuse symmetry: replace sums and products with variables. Pythagorean identity.

As lengths in a circle
• In terms of circles: the functions are lengths in the unit circle: (sin θ, cos θ). Tangent is the length of
the tangent to x-axis, cotangent is length to y-axis. Secant and cosecant are x and y intercepts.
• Problem 2: Radians are more natural than degrees: 2π radians is 360◦ .
2
• Identities: reflection over 0, π4 , π2 , shifts by π2 , π, 2π, Pythagorean identities, csc2 θ+sec2 θ = (cot θ + tan θ) .

As complex numbers
• Euler’s identity says eix = cos x + i sin x. Cosine is the real part and sine is the imaginary part.
• If z = eix then 1/z = e−ix . We can state cos x and sin x in terms of z only. Also, by de Moivre,
n
eix = cos nx + i sin nx. We can find cos nx and sin nx in terms of z only.
• Identities: reflection, Pythagorean identities.
• Problem 3: Let z = eix . Substitute sine and cosine. Everything cancels nicely.

1 From Complex Numbers in Trigonometry, https://aops.com/community/c6h609795. Read it, it’s good.


2 Session 5: Trigonometry

Sum and difference


• Fundamental is sin(x + y). Many derivations: stick two right triangles with angles x, y and common
side and find the area; use the unit circle and rotate; Euler’s identity.
• Derive sin (x ± y) , cos (x ± y) , tan (x ± y) , cot (x ± y). Triple tangent formula: x + y + z = π iff
tan x + tan y + tan z = tan x tan y tan z.
• Problem 4: Inspired by tangent sum formula. Force tangent by dividing by cos 96◦ and tan 45◦ = 1.
• Inverses for trigonometric functions exist. Derive tan−1 x ± tan−1 y, cot−1 x ± cot−1 y by subtituting in
the sum and difference formulas.

• Problem 5: The shortcut for tan−1 (p1 /q1 ) + tan−1 (p2 /q2 ) is “cross multiply and add for numerator,
product of denominators minus product of numerators for denominator.”
• Derive sin 2x. Write cos 2x in three ways using Pythagorean identity, and use that to derive half-angle
formulas. (Sine is minus, same as in complex numbers.) There is also derivation with Euler’s formula.
• Problem 6: The doubling inspires us to force double angle formula. Let expression be x and multiply
both sides by 2 sin 20◦ . (Interestingly, tan 20◦ tan 40◦ tan 80◦ = tan 60◦ .)
• Problem 7: This is important. Let a = cos π/5 and b = cos 2π/5. Then use double angle formulas on a
and b, but cos 4π/5 = − cos π/5 = −a.

Prosthaphaeresis
• Greek prosthesis means addition, aphaeresis means subtraction. Which is how you derive them:
cos x cos y, sin x sin y, sin x cos y by cancelling out cos(x + y) and cos(x − y), etc.

• Reverse formulas: find sin x ± sin y by reversing the prosthaphaeresis formulas. As in, let x0 = x − y
and let y 0 = x + y and rewrite.
• Problem 8: Looks like arithmetic sequence. We did arithmetic sequence by pairing up opposite terms.
Here, we pair sin 1◦ and sin 44◦ and use sum-to-product, etc. Everything cancels.

Laws
• Extended law of sines: draw the circumradius and use the definition of sine. Law of cosines: drop an
altitude use the Pythagorean theorem twice.
• Problem 9: Apply law of cosines twice: on 4ABD and 4BCD.

As functions
• Sine and cosine: domain is R, range is {−1, 1}. Period 2π. Graphs are translations of each other.

• Cosecant and secant graphs are like a bunch of parabolas. Cosecant domain is R − {nπ, n ∈ Z} and
secant domain is R − {(2n + 1)π/2, n ∈ Z}. Range is (−∞, −1] ∪ [1, ∞).
• Tangent and cotangent: tangent domain is R − {(2n + 1)π/2, n ∈ Z} and cotangent domain is R −
{nπ, n ∈ Z}. Range is R.

• Inverse functions: arcsin and arccos are domain [−1, 1]. Arcsin has range {−π/2, π/2}, arccos has range
{0, π}. Arctan has domain R and range {−π/2, π/2}: it maps the whole real line onto a finite interval.
• This means we need to be careful in solving equations like sin x = 1/2, √
because there are infinitely many
solutions. Also, sin−1 x + cos−1 x = π/2 and stuff like sin(cos−1 x) = 1 − x2 .
3 Session 5: Trigonometry

deg rad sin cos tan deg rad sin cos tan

π
0◦ 0 36◦
5

π π
15◦ 45◦
12 4

π π
18◦ 60◦
10 3

π π
22.5◦ 90◦
8 2

π
30◦ 180◦ π
6

Pythagorean identity: sin2 θ + cos2 θ = Double angle:

Dividing by sin2 θ gives: sin 2x =

Dividing by cos2 θ gives: cos 2x =

Sum and difference:


tan 2x =
sin (x ± y) =
cot 2x =
cos (x ± y) =
Product-to-sum:
tan (x ± y) =
2 cos x cos y =
cot (x ± y) = 2 sin x sin y =
Arctans: 2 sin x cos y =

tan−1 x + tan−1 y = Sum-to-product:

cot−1 x + cot−1 y = sin x ± sin y =

p1 p2
tan−1 +tan−1 = cos x + cos y =
q1 q2
Half-angle: cos x − cos y =

x
sin =
2 Law of sines:

x
cos = Law of cosines: .
2

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