Even though the following exercise has an explanation, I'm afraid I'm still just not seeing it.
. . .Given x = 9 tan(a), find the sine and cosine.
I know tan(a) = x/9, thus sin^2(a) + cos^2(a) = x/9. The book says that sin = x/9 + cos(a). I understand that, and I understand this:
. . .1 = (x^2/81)cos^2(a) + cos^2(a)
But then the book says:
. . .= cos^2(a)(x^2/81+1)
. . .cos^2(a) = 81/(x^2_81)
Then it finishes the exercise, which I get. But how you get a + 1 and get rid of one of the cos^2(a)? Do you multiply both sides by sin^2(a)? I can't seem to get it to work out like it shows.
Thank you.
. . .Given x = 9 tan(a), find the sine and cosine.
I know tan(a) = x/9, thus sin^2(a) + cos^2(a) = x/9. The book says that sin = x/9 + cos(a). I understand that, and I understand this:
. . .1 = (x^2/81)cos^2(a) + cos^2(a)
But then the book says:
. . .= cos^2(a)(x^2/81+1)
. . .cos^2(a) = 81/(x^2_81)
Then it finishes the exercise, which I get. But how you get a + 1 and get rid of one of the cos^2(a)? Do you multiply both sides by sin^2(a)? I can't seem to get it to work out like it shows.
Thank you.