The secant of an angle is the reciprocal of its cosine.
The cosecant of an angle is the reciprocal of its sine.
[note 1]
The cotangent of an angle is the reciprocal of its tangent.
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Graph of sec x
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Graph of cosec x
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Graph of cot x
Solving Equations with Secants, Cosecants, and Cotangents
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Solving an equation with secants, cosecants, or cotangents is pretty much the same method as with any other trigonometric equation.
e.g. Solve for
and , therefore
The Pythagorean trigonometric identity states that . We can divide both sides by to obtain another identity: . Alternatively, we can divide both sides by to obtain .
The addition formulae are used when we have a trigonometric function applied to a sum or difference, e.g. .
For sine, cosine, and tangent, the addition formulae are:[note 2]
The double angle formulae are a special case of the addition formulae, when both of the terms in the sum are equal.
Converting to or
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It is helpful when solving trigonometric equations to convert an expression into a single term. To do this, we can use the addition formulae.
e.g. Solve for
Using is pretty similar.
e.g. Solve for
- Notes
- ↑ Some sources may use , but this notation is not endorsed by Cambridge
- ↑ The proofs of these formulae are beyond the scope of the Cambridge Syllabus, but you can read about the proofs at Wikipedia
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