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Math Help: Trig Identities Options
Tantrum
#1 Posted : Saturday, January 28, 2012 6:26:25 PM
Rank: Frosh


Joined: 8/15/2011
Posts: 45
I'm trying to prove sin X + sin y = sin((x+y)/2)cos((x-y)/2)

Anyone got any suggestions?
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Fma
#2 Posted : Saturday, January 28, 2012 10:36:40 PM
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Joined: 4/11/2011
Posts: 32
correct me if im wrong but shouldnt the right side be multiplied by 2??
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Tantrum
#3 Posted : Sunday, January 29, 2012 1:08:46 AM
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Joined: 8/15/2011
Posts: 45
Nope, took this straight from my textbook.
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Quant
#4 Posted : Sunday, January 29, 2012 1:00:56 PM
Rank: Senior Student


Joined: 8/24/2011
Posts: 100
Tantrum wrote:
Nope, took this straight from my textbook.


Then your textbook is wrong. sin((x+y)/2)cos((x-y)/2) certainly doesn't equal sin x + sin y. It equals (sin x + sin y)/2.

Let's assume the question asks to prove sin x + sin y = 2sin((x+y)/2)cos((x-y)/2). There is nothing esoteric about this proof. Just use the fact that sin(A+B)=sin A cos B + cos A sin B and cos(A-B)=cos A cos B + sin A sin B.
bcd92
#5 Posted : Sunday, January 29, 2012 8:41:41 PM
Rank: Senior Student




Joined: 10/26/2011
Posts: 298
Quant wrote:
Tantrum wrote:
Nope, took this straight from my textbook.


Then your textbook is wrong. sin((x+y)/2)cos((x-y)/2) certainly doesn't equal sin x + sin y. It equals (sin x + sin y)/2.

Let's assume the question asks to prove sin x + sin y = 2sin((x+y)/2)cos((x-y)/2). There is nothing esoteric about this proof. Just use the fact that sin(A+B)=sin A cos B + cos A sin B and cos(A-B)=cos A cos B + sin A sin B.


<3
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Xiaohaha
#6 Posted : Tuesday, January 31, 2012 7:03:42 PM
Rank: Student Council


Joined: 12/21/2010
Posts: 326
it's an elementary proof if you rewrite sine as an exponential using euler's formula
iliketurtles
#7 Posted : Thursday, February 02, 2012 1:03:49 AM
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Xiaohaha wrote:
it's an elementary proof if you rewrite sine as an exponential using euler's formula

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randint
#8 Posted : Wednesday, May 09, 2012 2:18:05 PM
Rank: Valedictorian


Joined: 5/5/2012
Posts: 570
I'm currently in MCR3U(E) [this is an Enriched course that is offered in my school], we basically do MCR3U1 + MHF4U1 (No Calculus), I'd say that trigonometric identities are the hardest thing in the entire course (especially with tangents, which have some weird identities that are similar, but not so similar in some other aspects, to the sine and cosint identities).

Yes, if anyone wishes to go into some form of Math major, you must learn how to do proofs, properly. These are the basics:

sin(A+B)=sinAcosB+sinBcosA
sin(A-B)=sinAcosB-sinBcosA
cos(A+B)=cosAcosB-sinAsinB
cos(A-B)=cosAcosB+sinAsinB
sin(2A)=2sinAcosA
cos(2A)=(cosA)^2-(sinA)^2
sinA/cosA=tanA
(sinA)^2+(cosA)^2=1
(tanA)^2+1=(secA)^2

The identity "e^i*pi + 1 = 0" is something I do not understand, although we do not care about e at this moment in my MCR3UE course
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#9 Posted : Thursday, May 10, 2012 5:26:08 PM
Rank: Senior Student


Joined: 3/10/2011
Posts: 57
randint wrote:
I

The identity "e^i*pi + 1 = 0" is something I do not understand, although we do not care about e at this moment in my MCR3UE course


That's known as Euler's Identity. You can derive it very easily and intuitively via taylor series.

Salman from KhanAcademy derives it beautifully here (via taylor series):
http://www.khanacademy.o...la-and-euler-s-identity

Taylor series are very easy. You just use simple functions to approximate difficult ones. It's how your calculator solves for sin and cosine values.
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