Question #dc1fd

1 Answer
Oct 16, 2016

Here's a few examples of the trigonometric equations you may be required to solve.

Solve the equation #4sin^2x = 1#

Isolate #x#.

#sin^2x = 1/4#

#sinx = +-1/2#

#x = arcsin(+-1/2)#

#x = 30˚, 150˚, 210˚, 330˚#

Solve the equation #cos^2x = 2sin^2x + 2sinx#

Apply the identity #cos^2x + sin^2x = 1 -> cos^2x = 1 - sin^2x#

#1 - sin^2x = 2sin^2x + 2sinx#

#0 = 3sin^2x + 2sinx - 1#

#0 = 3sin^2x + 3sinx - sinx - 1#

#0 = 3sinx(sinx + 1) - 1(sinx + 1)#

#0 = (3sinx - 1)(sinx + 1)#

#sinx = 1/3 and sinx = -1#

#x = arcsin(1/3) and 270˚#

Solve the equation #cscx xx tanx = cotx xxsinx#

Apply the following identities:

#cscx = 1/sinx#
#tanx = sinx/cosx#
#cotx = cosx/sinx#

#1/sinx xx sinx/cosx = cosx/sinx xx sinx#

#1/cosx = cosx#

#1 = cos^2x#

#0 = cos^2x - 1#

#0 = (cosx + 1)(cosx - 1)#

#cosx = -1 and cosx = 1#

#x = 0˚ and 180˚#

However, these solutions are extraneous, since they render the original equation undefined with cotangent.

Solve the equation #sin(45˚ + x) = 1#

#45˚ + x = arcsin1#

#x = 90˚ - 45˚#

#x = 45˚#

The key to solving trigonometric equations is knowing your identities.

Hopefully this helps!