How do you show #arctan (x) ± arctan (y) = arctan [(x ± y) / (1 ± xy)] #?

1 Answer
May 25, 2016

First, we should state the tangent addition formula:

#tan(alpha+-beta)=(tan(alpha)+-tan(beta))/(1∓tan(alpha)tan(beta))#

Rearrange by taking the arctangent of both sides:

#alpha+-beta=arctan((tan(alpha)+-tan(beta))/(1∓tan(alpha)tan(beta)))#

Now, let:

  • #alpha=arctan(x)" "=>" "x=tan(alpha)#
  • #beta=arctan(y)" "=>" "y=tan(beta)#

Make the substitutions into the tangent formula:

#arctan(x)+-arctan(y)=arctan((x+-y)/(1∓xy))#

So, your identity is a little bit off since the minus-plus sign (#∓#) is needed in the denominator instead of the plus-minus (#pm#) sign. The minus-plus sign shows that the identity can be split as follows:

#{(arctan(x)+arctan(y)=arctan((x+y)/(1-xy))),(arctan(x)-arctan(y)=arctan((x-y)/(1+xy))):}#