The inverse of the cosine function is arcosine. The domain is −1 ≤ x ≤ 1 since the range of the cosine function is from -1 to 1. The range is from 0 to pi radians or 0 to 180 degrees.
This depends on wether you want your answer in radians or degrees. If you want the answer in degrees, the highest and lowest point of the sin graph wil always be 90, 270, 450... and crosses the zero point at 180, 360, 540... If you want your answer in radians, the graph crosses the zero point, at pi, 2 pi, 3 pi... and has it's highest/lowest point at 1/2 pi, 1 1/2 pi, 2 1/2 pi...
udefined
To find the tangent of 1, you can use the inverse tangent function (arctan) on a calculator. Simply input 1 into the arctan function and calculate the result. The tangent of 1 is approximately 0.7854.
arc sine is the inverse function of the sine function so if y = sin(x) then x = arcsin(y) where y belongs to [-pi/2, pi/2]. It can be calculated using the Taylor series given in the link below.
square root of x/pi
y = sin x is such a function. It has an inverse, of course; but the inverse, sin-1, strictly speaking, is not a function.Example: Given that x = pi/6, y must equal 0.5. However, given that y = 0.5, x can equal pi/6, 5 pi/6, 13 pi/6, 17 pi/6, or an infinity of values, both positive and negative.For y to be a function of x, and x to be, also, a function of y, there must be exactly one value of y that answers to a given value of x, and vice-versa. Then, and only then, is each function the inverse of the other.
The inverse of the cosine function is arcosine. The domain is −1 ≤ x ≤ 1 since the range of the cosine function is from -1 to 1. The range is from 0 to pi radians or 0 to 180 degrees.
This depends on wether you want your answer in radians or degrees. If you want the answer in degrees, the highest and lowest point of the sin graph wil always be 90, 270, 450... and crosses the zero point at 180, 360, 540... If you want your answer in radians, the graph crosses the zero point, at pi, 2 pi, 3 pi... and has it's highest/lowest point at 1/2 pi, 1 1/2 pi, 2 1/2 pi...
It is sine defined between -pi/2 and + pi/2 radians (-90 deg and +90 deg) and its inverse is defined over this range.
it is the same as a sin function only shifted to the left pi/2 units
udefined
To find the tangent of 1, you can use the inverse tangent function (arctan) on a calculator. Simply input 1 into the arctan function and calculate the result. The tangent of 1 is approximately 0.7854.
It is a function which maps the tangent ratio - any real value - to an angle in the range (-pi/2, pi/2) radians. Or (-90, 90) degrees.If tan(x) = y then x is the inverse tangent of y.It is also known as "arc tangent", and spreadsheets, such as Excel, use "atan" for this function.Warning:1/tangent = cotangent is the reciprocal, NOT the inverse.
arc sine is the inverse function of the sine function so if y = sin(x) then x = arcsin(y) where y belongs to [-pi/2, pi/2]. It can be calculated using the Taylor series given in the link below.
1/3.14159265358979323846264338327950288. Or 0.31830988618379067153776752674503
the graph of cos(x)=1 when x=0the graph of sin(x)=0 when x=0.But that only tells part of the story. The two graphs are out of sync by pi/2 radians (or 90°; also referred to as 1/4 wavelength or 1/4 cycle). One cycle is 2*pi radians (the distance for the graph to get back where it started and repeat itself.The cosine graph is 'ahead' (leads) of the sine graph by 1/4 cycle. Or you can say that the sine graph lags the cosine graph by 1/4 cycle.