arcsine Some calculators show it as SIN-1.
Yes, it is called arcsin.
The arcsine is the angle whose sine is equal to the given value. arcsine is also called sine inverse (sin-1 ) if sin 30o = 1/2 , then sin-1 1/2 = 30o
The inverse sine is the cosecant, otherwise known as "hypotenuse over opposite" or arcsine. The cosecant is often confused as being the inverse of the cosine, which, in reality, is the secant, otherwise known as "hypotenuse over adjacent" or arccosine.
type the value of sine in the calculator and press 2ND SIN for sin-1, or press 2ND SIN for sin-1 and type the value of sine, because -sin(.xxxx) = angle known as inverse sine
Inverse sine is defined for the domain [-1, 1]. Since 833 is way outside this domain, the value is not defined.
One is the inverse of the other, just like the arc-sine is the inverse of the sine, or division is the inverse of multiplication.
arcsine Some calculators show it as SIN-1.
Yes, both arcsin and sine inverse are the same.
Yes, it is called arcsin.
The arcsine is the angle whose sine is equal to the given value. arcsine is also called sine inverse (sin-1 ) if sin 30o = 1/2 , then sin-1 1/2 = 30o
arcsin(.75)≈0.848062079
No. The inverse of the secant is called the arc-secant. The relation between the secant and the cosecant is similar to the relation between the sine and the cosine - they are somehow related, but they are not inverse functions. The secant is the reciprocal of the cosine (sec x = 1 / cos x). The cosecant is the reciprocal of the sine (cos x = 1 / sin x).
The inverse sine is the cosecant, otherwise known as "hypotenuse over opposite" or arcsine. The cosecant is often confused as being the inverse of the cosine, which, in reality, is the secant, otherwise known as "hypotenuse over adjacent" or arccosine.
type the value of sine in the calculator and press 2ND SIN for sin-1, or press 2ND SIN for sin-1 and type the value of sine, because -sin(.xxxx) = angle known as inverse sine
The inverse of sine (sin) is cosecant (csc). The inverse of cosine (cos) is secant (sec). The inverse of tangent (tan) is cotangent (cot).
NO FALSE