All you need is knowledge of the sine and cosine ratios in a right angle triangle, and Pythagoras.
Using Pythagoras you can work out the third side of the triangle which means you now know the value of cos B and so can substitute that into 3 cos B - 4 cos³ B and simplify it to see what the result is; if the result is 0, you have shown the required value.
Try working it out before reading any further.
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If you can't work it out by your self, read on:
The sine ratio is opposite/hypotenuse
The cosine ratio is adjacent/hypotenuse
In a right angled triangle Pythagoras holds:
hypotenuse² = adjacent² + opposite²
→ adjacent = √(hypotenuse² - opposite²)
If sin B = 1/2 → opposite = 1, hypotenuse = 2
→ adjacent = √(2² -1²) = √(4 - 1) = √3
→ cos B = adjacent/hypotenuse = (√3)/2
→ 3 cos B - 4 cos³ B = 3 × (√3)/2 - 4 × ((√3)/2)³
= 3(√3)/2 - 4((√3)²/2³)
= 3(√3)/2 - 4(3(√3)/8)
= 3(√3)/2 - 3(√3) × 4/8
= 3(√3)/2 - 3(√3)/2
= 0
sin cubed + cos cubed (sin + cos)( sin squared - sin.cos + cos squared) (sin + cos)(1 + sin.cos)
sec(x)=1/cos(x), by definition of secant.
To show that (cos tan = sin) ??? Remember that tan = (sin/cos) When you substitute it for tan, cos tan = cos (sin/cos) = sin QED
1/ Tan = 1/ (Sin/Cos) = Cos/Sin = Cot (Cotangent)
Sin[x] = Cos[x] + (1/3)
cos(3t) = cos(2t + t) = cos(2t)*cos(t) - sin(2t)*sin(t) = [cos2(t) - sin2(t)]*cos(t) - 2*cos(t)*sin(t)*sin(t) = [cos2(t) - sin2(t)]*cos(t) - 2*cos(t)*sin2(t) then, since sin2(t) = 1 - cos2(t) = [2*cos2(t) - 1]*cos(t) - 2*cos(t)*[1 - cos2(t)] = 2*cos3(t) - cos(t) - 2*cos(t) + 2*cos3(t) = 4*cos3(t) - 3*cos(t)
-1
either cos OR tan-sin equals zero socos=0 at pi/2 and 3pi/2ortan=sin which is impossibleim not sure though
cos pi over four equals the square root of 2 over 2 This value can be found by looking at a unit circle. Cos indicates it is the x value of the point pi/4 which is (square root 2 over 2, square root 2 over 2)
It would be 1 over square root 5.
No, but cos(-x) = cos(x), because the cosine function is an even function.
Well, darling, if we square the first equation and the second equation, add them together, and do some algebraic magic, we can indeed show that a squared plus b squared equals 89. It's like a little math puzzle, but trust me, the answer is as sassy as I am.