annnabannnana
New member
- Joined
- May 23, 2021
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i think it has to be in terms of 't', sorry I'm not sure. thanks for commenting!Can you write an expression for tan 2A in terms of tan A ?
Yes it does but I see it as a two-step process.i think it has to be in terms of 't', sorry I'm not sure. thanks for commenting!
hi would it just end up being 2t/1-t^2[MATH]\tan 2\theta = \frac{\sin 2\theta}{\cos 2\theta} = \frac{2\sin \theta \cos \theta}{\cos^{2} \theta - \sin^2 \theta} = \frac{2\tan \theta}{1 - \tan^2 \theta}[/MATH]
[MATH]\tan \theta = \frac{\sin \theta}{\cos \theta}[/MATH]
[MATH]\sin \theta = \frac{2\tan \frac{\theta}{2}}{1 + \tan^2 \frac{\theta}{2}}[/MATH]
[MATH]\cos \theta = \frac{1 - \tan^2 \frac{\theta}{2}}{1 + \tan^2 \frac{\theta}{2}}[/MATH]
What can you do more with these expressions?
No!hi would it just end up being 2t/1-t^2
No!
Please share your work.
Yeah, that is correct for [MATH]\tan \theta[/MATH], but you need to do [MATH]\tan 2\theta[/MATH]hi would it just end up being 2t/1-t^2