Trig identity: sin^4 theta + cot^2 theta = (1/4)sin^2 2theta

hplovr411

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Jul 27, 2007
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I need to prove:

sin^4 THETA + cot^2 THETA = (1/4)sin^2 (2THETA)

Anyone who can solve the problem step by step would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks!
 
\(\displaystyle \L\\sin^{4}({\theta})+cot^{2}({\theta})=\frac{sin^{2}(2{\theta})}{4}\)

I may be wrong, but I don't believe that's an identity.

Are you sure you copied it correctly?.
 
Yep thats right. The teacher comes up with really weird problems. We have to do this on our final

heres how the teacher typed it: SIN^4 THEDA COT^2 THEDA = 1/4 SIN ^2 (2) THEDA
 
\(\displaystyle \L\begin{array}{rcl}
\sin ^4 (t)\cot ^2 (t) & = & \sin ^4 (t)\frac{{\cos ^2 (t)}}{{\sin ^2 (t)}} \\
& = & \sin ^2 (t)\cos ^2 (t) \\
& = & \left( {\frac{1}{2}\sin (2t)} \right)^2 \\
& = & \frac{{\sin ^2 (2t)}}{4} \\
\end{array}\)
 
Oh, I see. You had a sum the first post, not a product. A typo.

BTW, that's 'theta', not theda.
 
hplovr411 said:
Yep thats right. The teacher comes up with really weird problems. We have to do this on our final

heres how the teacher typed it: SIN^4 THEDA COT^2 THEDA = 1/4 SIN ^2 (2) THEDA

The problem as you originally typed it had a "+" sign between sin<SUP>4</SUP> @ and cot<SUP>2</SUP> @.....that's quite a different problem.

sin<SUP>4</SUP> @ * cot<SUP>2</SUP> @ = (1/4) sin<SUP>2</SUP> (2@)

cot @ = cos @ / sin @, so we can re-write the left side:

sin<SUP>4</SUP> @ * (cos<SUP>2</SUP> @ / sin<SUP>2</SUP> @)

or,

sin<SUP>2</SUP> @ * cos<SUP>2</SUP> @

Multiply by 4/4:

(4 sin<SUP>2</SUP> @ cos<SUP>2</SUP> @) / 4

(2 sin @ cos @)<SUP>2</SUP> / 4

(sin 2@)<SUP>2</SUP> / 4

(1/4) * (sin 2@)<SUP>2</SUP>

And that's what is on the right-hand side.
 
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