I am stuck with the simple expression \frac{\cos^2(\theta+\alpha)}{1-\cos^2(\theta-\alpha)}=\text{const.} where \theta is a

sweetrainyday8s2

sweetrainyday8s2

Answered question

2022-02-28

I am stuck with the simple expression
cos2(θ+α)1cos2(θα)=const.
where θ is a variable and α is the number satisfying
α=tan1(43)

Answer & Explanation

junoon363km

junoon363km

Beginner2022-03-01Added 8 answers

Note that 1cos2(θα)=sin2(θα)
That gives you:
cos2(θ+α)1cos2(θα)=const.=cos2(θ+α)sin2(θα)
For the numerator:
cos(θ+α)=cosθcosαsinθsinα (1)
For the denominator:
sin(θα)=sinθcosαcosθsinα (2)
Note that since tanα=43, we have a 3:4:5 triangle, using the Pythagorean Theorem, and noting that the leg opposite α must be of length 4, and the leg adjacent to α is length 3. This gives us a hypotenuse of length 5. Calculating
cosα=adjacenthypotenuse=35. Likewise sinα=oppositehypotenuse=45.
So (1) becomes cos2(θ+α)=(35cosθ45sinθ)2
And (2) becomes sin2(θα)=(35sinθ45cosθ)2

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?