How do you use the half-angle identity to find the exact value of cos(17π/12)?

original question: "Use a half-angle formula to find the exact value of cos 17π/12"

2 Answers
Apr 2, 2017

As demonstrated below

Explanation:

I derive formulae as I typically do and I hope you find it helpful in spite of being a little long.

First, we find the half-angle formula for the cosine. We know that
cos(2x) = cos^2(x) - sin^2(x) = cos^2(x) - (1 - cos^2(x)) = 2cos^2(x) - 1 so solving for cos(x) we get
cos(x) = +- sqrt((cos(2x) + 1)/2),
where we have to determine the sign later. Replacing x with x/2 we get a half-angle formula
cos(x/2) = +- sqrt((cos(x) + 1)/2).

If we let x = (17 pi)/6, then we get that
cos((17 pi) /12) = +- sqrt((cos((17 pi)/6) + 1)/2).

Let us compute cos((17 pi)/6) by observing that (17 pi)/6 = (18 pi)/6 - pi/6 = 3pi - pi/6. Rewriting fractions of pi to a sum of an integer multiple of pi and a smaller fraction of pi is often useful for finding exact values in trigonometric tables.

Using that
cos(2pi + y) = cos(y),
cos(pi + y) = -cos(y),
and
cos(-y) = cos(y)
we find that
cos((17pi)/6) = cos((18pi)/6 - pi/6) = cos(2pi + pi - pi/6) = -cos(-pi/6) = -cos(pi/6),
which we can find in standard tables (or the unit circle) to be equal to -sqrt(3)/2. Plugging into our half-angle formula we get that
cos((17 pi) /12) = +- sqrt(-sqrt(3)/2 + 1)/2.

What remains now is to figure out the sign of cos((17 pi)/12). We find that the angle is in third quadrant by observing that
pi<(17 pi)/12<(18 pi)/12=(3 pi)/2.
There, the cosine is negative (look up in a table or book, or look at the unit circle).

Therefore, we must choose the negative sign, and conclude that
cos((17 pi) /12) = - 1/2sqrt(-sqrt(3)/2 + 1).

Apr 4, 2017

cos ((17pi)/12) = - sqrt(2 - sqrt3)/2

Explanation:

Use trig table and unit circle:
cos ((17pi)/12) = cos ((-7pi)/12 + 2pi) = cos ((-7pi)/12) = cos ((7pi)/12)
= cos (pi/12 + pi/2) = - sin (pi/2)
Find sin (pi/12) by applying trig identity -->
2sin^2 a = 1 - cos 2a
In this case:
2sin^2 (pi/12) = 1 - cos (pi/6) = 1 - sqrt3/2 = (2 - sqrt3)/2
sin^2 (pi/12) = (2 - sqrt3)/4
sin (pi/12) = +- sqrt(2 - sqrt3)/2
Since sin (pi/12) is positive, take the positive value.
Finally,
cos ((17pi)/12) = - sin (pi/12) = - sqrt(2 - sqrt3)/2