I am working on a trig problem and I am stuck. Here is the problem:
2 sin 4x = 2 cos 2x where I am trying to find the solutions in the interval [0,2pi)
This is what I have so far:
I divided both sides by 2 and got: sin 4x = cos 2x
Since cos 2x = cos^2 (x) - sin^2 (x) , I now have sin 4x = cos^2 (x) - sin^2 (x)
Now since cos^2(x) = 1 - sin^2(x), I put that in and got:
sin 4x = 1 - sin^2(x) - sin^2(x)
sin 4x = 1 - 2sin^2(x)
This is where I get stuck. I don't know how to work with the sin 4x. If I change it to 2sin2xcos2x, that really doesn't help as now I have the cos back into the equation when I just trying to isolate for one function. Can anyone help me straighten this out?
Thank you!
2 sin 4x = 2 cos 2x where I am trying to find the solutions in the interval [0,2pi)
This is what I have so far:
I divided both sides by 2 and got: sin 4x = cos 2x
Since cos 2x = cos^2 (x) - sin^2 (x) , I now have sin 4x = cos^2 (x) - sin^2 (x)
Now since cos^2(x) = 1 - sin^2(x), I put that in and got:
sin 4x = 1 - sin^2(x) - sin^2(x)
sin 4x = 1 - 2sin^2(x)
This is where I get stuck. I don't know how to work with the sin 4x. If I change it to 2sin2xcos2x, that really doesn't help as now I have the cos back into the equation when I just trying to isolate for one function. Can anyone help me straighten this out?
Thank you!