The answer depends on what information you do have. For instance, if you have the sine, the cosecant is simply 1 over the sine. Formally, the cosecant is hypotenuse over opposite.
There is no minimum value for the cosecant function.
The minimum value of the secant and cosecant is ' 1 '. There are no zeros.
secant of (A) = cosecant of (90- A) 'A' here is 80 degrees.
No, the inverse of sine is not cosecant. The inverse of sine, denoted as arcsin or sin⁻¹, allows you to find the angle whose sine is a given value. Cosecant, on the other hand, is the reciprocal of sine, defined as csc(x) = 1/sin(x). Thus, while they are related, they represent different mathematical concepts.
-sqrt2
Cosecant is the reciprocal of sine. To find the cosecant of an angle using a calculator, find the sine of that angle (using the Sin button) and then divide 1 by the result.
The cosecant of an angle is the reciprocal of the sine of that angle. So, to find the cosecant of 105 degrees, you first need to find the sine of 105 degrees. The sine of 105 degrees is approximately 0.9659. Therefore, the cosecant of 105 degrees is approximately 1.0353 (1 divided by 0.9659).
cosecant(x) = 1/sin(x)
There is no minimum value for the cosecant function.
Yes: cosecant = 1/sine If sine negative, 1/sine is negative → cosecant is negative.
secant of (A) = cosecant of (90- A) 'A' here is 80 degrees.
The minimum value of the secant and cosecant is ' 1 '. There are no zeros.
The period of the cosecant function is 2π, which means the graph of cosecant repeats every 2π units along the x-axis.
No, it is not.
-sqrt2
Cosecant(115 deg) = 1/sine(115 deg) = 1/0.9063 = 1.1034
cosecant