Some math questions- PreCalculus

aghtar

New member
Joined
Apr 15, 2012
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2
Hi guys, well I have some problems I'm struggling with.

Rewrite sqrt((1-cos(10x))/12) using a half angle identity..

So I used the sin(x/2)= +/- sqrt((1-cos(x))/2) identity, and came up with this:

sin (10x/12) = +/- sqrt(1-cos(10x))/12) is that correct?

My other question concerns rectangular and polar coordinates..

If the professor gave us this instructions:
Provide and equivalent point in the different coordinate system. (There may be more than one correct answer, but you only need provide one).

Then gave us this chart:
RectangularPolar


(exact values)
(-2, 3
format16.gif
/4)
(-3, -4)

(round to three decimal places)

--Note --The spaces above the statements within parentheses should be where we write our answers.

How should I go about that problem? I missed that class, and have no idea how to begin.

Thanks for any help. :)
 
Last edited:
Hi guys, well I have some problems I'm struggling with.

Rewrite sqrt((1-cos(10x))/12) using a half angle identity..

So I used the sin(x/2)= +/- sqrt((1-cos(x))/2) identity, and came up with this:

sin (10x/12) = +/- sqrt(1-cos(10x))/12) is that correct?

My other question concerns rectangular and polar coordinates..

If the professor gave us this instructions:
Provide and equivalent point in the different coordinate system. (There may be more than one correct answer, but you only need provide one).

Then gave us this chart:
Rectangular
Polar
(exact values)
(-2, 3
format16.gif
/4)
(-3, -4)
(round to three decimal places)
--Note --The spaces above the statements within parentheses should be where we write our answers.

How should I go about that problem? I missed that class, and have no idea how to begin.

Thanks for any help. :)

First, only one question oer thread, please. I'll let you slide this time since you are new ;)

For the first one, I'm not sure I understand your first equation, but \(\displaystyle \displaystyle\displaystyle\sin(\frac{10x}{12})=\pm\sqrt{\frac{1-\cos(\frac{10x}{6})}{2}}\)

For the second one, remember that given r and theta, \(\displaystyle \displaystyle x=r\cdot\cos(\theta)\) and \(\displaystyle \displaystyle y=r\cdot\sin(\theta)\)

And given x and y, \(\displaystyle \displaystyle r=\sqrt{x^2+y^2}\) and \(\displaystyle \displaystyle \theta=\arctan{\frac{y}{x}} + \pi\) if x < 0

Try these hints out and see what you get.
 
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