Basic Trigonometric Equations
Basic Trigonometric Equations
A basic trigonometric equation involves a single trigonometric function equal to a constant, such as sinx=a, cosx=a, or tanx=a. To solve these equations, we use the unit circle and our knowledge of reference angles.
The Unit Circle and Principal Solutions
When you solve an equation like cosx=22ââ, you are looking for the angles x whose cosine (the x-coordinate on the unit circle) is equal to 22ââ.
Because the unit circle is symmetric, there are usually two angles within a single full rotation, [0,2Ï), that satisfy the equation (unless the constant is 1, â1, or 0).
To find them:
- Find the reference angle in the first quadrant.
- Use the sign of the constant (positive or negative) to determine which quadrants the solutions lie in.
Finding General Solutions
Trigonometric functions are periodic, meaning their values repeat infinitely. If a problem asks for all solutions (not just those in a specific interval), you must write a general solution by adding multiples of the function's period.
Sine and Cosine
The period of both sine and cosine is 2Ï. If x1â and x2â are your principal solutions in [0,2Ï), the general solutions are: x=x1â+2kÏandx=x2â+2kÏ where k is any integer (kâZ).
Tangent
The period of the tangent function is Ï. Because tangent values repeat every half-circle, you only need to find the principal solution x1â in the interval [0,Ï) or (â2Ïâ,2Ïâ) and add multiples of Ï: x=x1â+kÏ
Example 1: Solving in a Specific Interval
Problem: Find all solutions of sinx=21â in [0,2Ï).
Step 1: Identify the reference angle. We know from basic trig values that sin(6Ïâ)=21â.
Step 2: Determine the quadrants. The value 21â is positive, and sine is positive in Quadrants I and II.
Step 3: Find the angles in those quadrants.
- Quadrant I: x=6Ïâ
- Quadrant II: x=Ïâ6Ïâ=65Ïâ
Answer: x=6Ïâ,65Ïâ
Example 2: Finding All Solutions (General Solution)
Problem: Solve tanx=â3â for all x.
Step 1: Identify the reference angle. We know tan(3Ïâ)=3â.
Step 2: Determine the quadrant for the principal solution. Tangent is negative in Quadrants II and IV. Let's find the angle in Quadrant II: x=Ïâ3Ïâ=32Ïâ
Step 3: Write the general solution. Since the period of tangent is Ï, we just add kÏ to our principal solution.
Answer: x=32Ïâ+kÏ, where k is any integer.