In a right triangle, if angle measures , what is the measure of angle ?
Table of contents
- 0. Review of College Algebra4h 43m
- 1. Measuring Angles40m
- 2. Trigonometric Functions on Right Triangles2h 5m
- 3. Unit Circle1h 19m
- 4. Graphing Trigonometric Functions1h 19m
- 5. Inverse Trigonometric Functions and Basic Trigonometric Equations1h 41m
- 6. Trigonometric Identities and More Equations2h 34m
- 7. Non-Right Triangles1h 38m
- 8. Vectors2h 25m
- 9. Polar Equations2h 5m
- 10. Parametric Equations1h 6m
- 11. Graphing Complex Numbers1h 7m
- OLD 1. Angles and the Trigonometric Functions Coming soon
- OLD 2. Trigonometric Functions graphs, Inverse Trigonometric Functions Coming soon
- OLD 3. Trigonometric Identities and Equations Coming soon
- OLD 4. Laws of Sines, Cosines and Vectors Coming soon
- OLD 5. Complex Numbers, Polar Coordinates and Parametric Equations Coming soon
- NEW (not used) 7. Laws of Sines, Cosines and Vectors Coming soon
- NEW (not used) 8. Vectors Coming soon
- NEW(not used) 9. Polar equations Coming soon
- NEW (not used) 11. Graphing Complex Numbers Coming soon
2. Trigonometric Functions on Right Triangles
Trigonometric Functions on Right Triangles
Multiple Choice
Which trigonometric functions have a domain of ?
A
The sine and cosine functions ( and )
B
The tangent and cotangent functions ( and )
C
The secant and cosecant functions ( and )
D
The inverse sine and inverse cosine functions ( and )
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Verified step by step guidance1
Recall that the domain of a function is the set of all possible input values (x-values) for which the function is defined.
Identify the domains of the basic trigonometric functions: sine (sin), cosine (cos), tangent (tan), cotangent (cot), secant (sec), and cosecant (csc). These functions typically have domains of all real numbers or all real numbers except where they are undefined (like tan and cot at certain points).
Understand that the inverse trigonometric functions, such as arcsin (inverse sine) and arccos (inverse cosine), have restricted domains because they reverse the original functions and must be one-to-one.
Recall that the domain of the inverse sine function, \(\arcsin(x)\), and the inverse cosine function, \(\arccos(x)\), is limited to the interval \([-1, 1]\) because sine and cosine values only range between -1 and 1.
Therefore, the trigonometric functions with domain \([-1, 1]\) are the inverse sine and inverse cosine functions, \(\arcsin\) and \(\arccos\).
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