| Trigonometric Function |
Article Index for Trigonometric |
Website Links For Function |
Information AboutTrigonometric Function |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT TRIGONOMETRIC FUNCTION | |
| trigonometry | |
| elementary special functions | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
|
In Mathematics , the trigonometric functions are Function s of an Angle , important when studying Triangle s and modeling periodic phenomena. They are commonly defined as Ratio s of two sides of a right triangle containing the angle, and can equivalently be defined as the lengths of various line segments from a Unit Circle . More modern definitions express them as Infinite Series or as solutions of certain Differential Equation s, allowing their extension to positive and negative values and even to Complex Number s. All of these approaches will be presented below. In modern usage, there are six basic trigonometric functions, which are tabulated below along with equations relating them to one another. Especially in the case of the last four, these relations are often taken as the ''definitions'' of those functions, but one can equally define them geometrically or by other means and derive the relations. A few other functions were common historically (and appeared in the earliest tables), but are now little-used, such as: Many more relations between these functions are listed in the article about Trigonometric Identities . ETYMOLOGY OF ''SINE'' Our modern word ''sine'' is derived from the Latin word ''sinus'', which means "bay" or "fold", from a mistranslation (via Arabic ) of the Sanskrit word ''jiva'', alternatively spelled ''jya''. ''Jiva'', which was originally called ''ardha-jiva'', meaning "half-chord", in the 5th Century by Aryabhata , was transliterated by the Arab s as ''jiba'' (جب), but was confused for another word ''jaib'' (جب), meaning "bay", by European translators such as Robert Of Chester and Gherardo Of Cremona in Toledo in the 12th Century , probably because ''jiba'' (جب) and ''jaib'' (جب) are written the same in Arabic . Arabic being an ancient language, has different forms for each letter in the alphabet, as there are accents for the sound of each letter, which is all different from the Latin or the English language HISTORY There is evidence that the Babylonia ns first used trigonometric functions, based on a table of numbers written on a Babylonian Cuneiform tablet, Plimpton 322 (circa 1900 BC ), which can be interpreted as a table of secants. There is still much debate on whether it was a trignometric table however. The earliest use of sine appears in the '' Sulba Sutras '' written in Ancient India from the 8th Century BC to the 6th Century BC , which correctly computes the sine of π /4 (45 ° ) as 1/√2 in a procedure for circling the square (the opposite of Squaring The Circle ), though they hadn't yet developed the notion of a sine in a general sense. Trigonometric functions were later studied by Hipparchus of Nicaea ( 180 - 125 BC ), who tabulated the lengths of circle arcs (angle ''A'' times radius ''r'') with the lengths of the subtending chords (2''r'' sin(''A''/2)). Later, Ptolemy of Egypt ( 2nd Century ) expanded upon this work in his '' Almagest '', deriving addition/subtraction formulas for the equivalent of sin(''A'' + ''B'') and cos(''A'' + ''B''). Ptolemy derived the equivalent of the half-angle formula sin2(''A''/2) = (1 − cos(''A''))/2, and created a table of his results. Neither the tables of Hipparchus nor of Ptolemy have survived to the present day, although there is little doubt that they once existed due to descriptions by other ancient authors (Boyer, 1991). The next significant developments of trigonometry were in India . Mathematician -astronomer Aryabhata ( 476 – 550 ), in his work ''Aryabhata-Siddhanta'', first defined the sine as the modern relationship between half an angle and half a chord, while also defining the cosine, Versine , and inverse sine. His works also contain the earliest known tables of sine values and versine (1 − cosine) values (in contrast to the tables of chords earlier produced by Hipparchus and Ptolemy), in 3.75° intervals from 0° to 90°, to an accuracy of 4 decimal places. He used the words ''jya'' for sine, ''kojya'' for cosine, ''ukramajya'' for versine, and ''otkram jya'' for inverse sine. The words ''jya'' and ''kojya'' eventually became ''sine'' and ''cosine'' respectively after a mistranslation (see Etymology above). Other Indian mathematicians later expanded Aryabhata's works on trigonometry. Varahamihira developed the formulas sin2''x'' + cos2''x'' = 1, sin ''x'' = cos(π/2 − ''x''), and (1 − cos(2''x''))/2 = sin2''x''. Bhaskara I produced a formula for calculating the sine of an acute angle without the use of a table. Brahmagupta developed the formula 1 − sin2''x'' = cos2''x'' = sin2(π/2 − ''x''), and the Brahmagupta Interpolation Formula for computing sine values, which is a special case of the Newton - Stirling interpolation formula up to second order. The Indian works were later translated and expanded by Muslim Mathematicians . Persian mathematician produced tables of sines and tangents, and also contributed to Spherical Trigonometry . By the 10th Century , in the work of Abu'l-Wafa , Muslim mathematicians were using all six trigonometric functions, and had sine tables in 0.25° increments, to 8 decimal places of accuracy, as well as tables of Tangent values. Abu'l-Wafa also developed the trigonometric formula sin 2''x'' = 2 sin ''x'' cos ''x''. Persian mathematician Omar Khayyam solved Cubic Equation s using approximate numerical solutions found by interpolation in trigonometric tables. All of these earlier works on trigonometry treated it mainly as an adjunct to astronomy; perhaps the first treatment as a subject in its own right was by Indian mathematician Bhaskara II and Persian mathematician Nasir Al-Din Tusi , who also gave the formula ''a''/sin ''A'' = ''b''/sin ''B'' = ''c''/sin ''C'' and listed the six distinct cases of a right angled triangle in spherical trigonometry. Regiomontanus was perhaps the first mathematician in Europe to treat trigonometry as a distinct mathematical discipline, in his ''De triangulis omnimodus'' written in 1464 , as well as his later ''Tabulae directionum'' which included the tangent function, unnamed. In the 13th Century , Persian mathematician Nasir Al-Din Tusi states the Law Of Sines and provides a proof for it. In the work of Persian mathematician Ghiyath Al-Kashi ( 14th Century ), there are trigonometric tables giving values of the sine function to four Sexagesimal digits (equivalent to 8 decimal places) for each 1° of argument with differences to be added for each 1/60 of 1°. Timurid mathematician Ulugh Beg 's (14th century) accurate tables of sines and tangents were correct to 8 decimal places. Madhava (c. 1400 ) in South India made early strides in the Mathematical Analysis of trigonometric functions and their Infinite Series expansions. He developed the concepts of the Power Series and Taylor Series , and produced the Trigonometric Series expansions of sine, cosine, tangent and arctangent. Using the Taylor series approximations of sine and cosine, he produced a sine table to 12 decimal places of accuracy and a cosine table to 9 decimal places of accuracy. He also gave the power series of π, π/4, the Radius , Diameter , Circumference and angle θ in terms of trigonometric functions. His works were expanded by his followers at the Kerala School upto the 16th Century . The ''Opus palatinum de triangulis'' of Rheticus , a student of Copernicus , was probably the first to define trigonometric functions directly in terms of right triangles instead of circles, with tables for all six trigonometric functions; this work was finished by Rheticus' student Valentin Otho in 1596. ''Introductio in analysin infinitorum'', written in 1748 by Euler was mostly responsible for establishing the analytic treatment of trigonometric functions in Europe, defining them as infinite series and presenting " Euler's Formula " ''e''''ix'' = cos(''x'') + ''i'' sin(''x''). Euler used the near-modern abbreviations ''sin.'', ''cos.'', ''tang.'', ''cot.'', ''sec.'', and ''cosec.'' Brook Taylor defined the general Taylor series and gave the series expansions and approximations for all six trigonometric functions. The works of James Gregory and Colin Maclaurin were also very influential in the development of trigonometric series. RIGHT TRIANGLE DEFINITIONS always includes a 90° (π/2 radians) angle, here labeled C. Angles A and B may vary. Trigonometric functions specify the relationships between side lengths and interior angles of a right triangle.]] In order to define the trigonometric functions for the angle ''A'', start with an arbitrary Right Triangle that contains the angle ''A'': We use the following names for the sides of the triangle:
All triangles are taken to exist in the Euclidean Plane so that the inside angles of each triangle sum to π Radian s (or 180 ° ); therefore, for a right triangle the two non-right angles are between zero and π/2 radians. The reader should note that the following definitions, strictly speaking, only define the trigonometric functions for angles in this range. We extend them to the full set of real arguments by requiring that they be Periodic Function s. 1) The sine of an angle is the ratio of the length of the opposite side to the length of the hypotenuse. In our case :. Note that this ratio does not depend on the particular right triangle chosen, as long as it contains the angle ''A'', since all those triangles are Similar . 5) The secant sec(''A'') is the Multiplicative Inverse of cos(''A''), i.e. the ratio of the length of the hypotenuse to the length of the adjacent side: :. 6) The cotangent cot(''A'') is the Multiplicative Inverse of tan(''A''), i.e. the ratio of the length of the adjacent side to the length of the opposite side: :. Mnemonics There are a number of Mnemonic s for the above definitions, for example ''SOHCAHTOA'' (sounds like "soak a toe-a" or "sock-a toe-a" depending upon the use of American English or British English . Can also be read as "soccer tour"). It means:
Many other such words and phrases have been contrived. For more see: Trigonometry Mnemonics . Slope definitions Equivalent to the right-triangle definitions, the trigonometric functions can be defined in terms of the ''rise'', ''run'', and '' Slope '' of a line segment relative to some horizontal line. The slope is commonly taught as "rise over run" or rise/run. The three main trigonometric functions are commonly taught in the order sine, cosine, tangent. With a Unit Circle , this gives rise to the following matchings: # Sine is first, rise is first. Sine takes an angle and tells the rise. # Cosine is second, run is second. Cosine takes an angle and tells the run. # Tangent is the slope formula that combines the rise and run. Tangent takes an angle and tells the slope. This shows the main use of tangent and arctangent (i.e. cotangent), which is converting between the two ways of telling how slanted a line is: angles and slopes. While the radius of the circle makes no difference for the slope (the slope doesn't depend on the length of the slanted line), it does affect rise and run. To adjust and find the actual rise and run, just multiply the sine and cosine by the radius. For instance, if the circle has radius 5, the run at an angle of 1 is 5 cos(1). UNIT-CIRCLE DEFINITIONS ]] The six trigonometric functions can also be defined in terms of the Unit Circle , the Circle of radius one centered at the origin. The unit circle definition provides little in the way of practical calculation; indeed it relies on right triangles for most angles. The unit circle definition does, however, permit the definition of the trig functions for all positive and negative arguments, not just for angles between 0 and π/2 radians. It also provides a single visual picture that encapsulates at once all the important triangles used so far. The equation for the unit circle is: : In the picture, some common angles, measured in radians, are given. Measurements in the counter clockwise direction are positive angles and measurements in the clockwise direction are negative angles. Let a line making an angle of θ with the positive half of the ''x''-axis intersect the unit circle. The ''x''- and ''y''-coordinates of this point of intersection are equal to cos θ and sin θ, respectively. The triangle in the graphic enforces the formula; the radius is equal to the hypotenuse and has length 1, so we have sin θ = ''y''/1 and cos θ = ''x''/1. The unit circle can be thought of as a way of looking at an infinite number of triangles by varying the lengths of their legs but keeping the lengths of their hypotenuses equal to 1. For angles greater than 2π or less than −2π, simply continue to rotate around the circle. In this way, sine and cosine become Periodic Function s with period 2π: : : for any angle θ and any Integer ''k''. The ''smallest'' positive period of a periodic function is called the ''primitive period'' of the function. The primitive period of the sine, cosine, secant, or cosecant is a full circle, i.e. 2π radians or 360 degrees; the primitive period of the tangent or cotangent is only a half-circle, i.e. π radians or 180 degrees. Above, only sine and cosine were defined directly by the unit circle, but the other four trig functions can be defined by: : : To the right is an image that displays a noticeably different graph of the trigonometric function f(θ)= tan(θ) graphed on the cartesian plane. Note that its x-intercepts correspond to that of sin(θ) while its undefined values correspond to the x-intercepts of the cos(θ). Observe that the function's results change slowly around angles of ''k''π, but change rapidly at angles close to (''k''/2)π. The graph of the tangent function also has a vertical Asymptote at θ = ''k''π/2. This is the case because the function approaches infinity as θ approaches ''k''/π from the left and minus infinity as it approaches ''k''/π from the right. Alternatively, ''all'' of the basic trigonometric functions can be defined in terms of a unit circle centered at ''O'' (shown at right), and similar such geometric definitions were used historically. In particular, for a chord ''AB'' of the circle, where θ is half of the subtended angle, sin(θ) is ''AC'' (half of the chord), a definition introduced in India (see below). cos(θ) is the horizontal distance ''OC'', and Versin (θ) = 1 − cos(θ) is ''CD''. tan(θ) is the length of the segment ''AE'' of the tangent line through ''A'', hence the word '' Tangent '' for this function. cot(θ) is another tangent segment, ''AF''. sec(θ) = ''OE'' and csc(θ) = ''OF'' are segments of Secant Line s (intersecting the circle at two points), and can also be viewed as projections of ''OA'' along the tangent at ''A'' to the horizontal and vertical axes, respectively. ''DE'' is Exsec (θ) = sec(θ) − 1 (the portion of the secant outside, or ''ex'', the circle). From these constructions, it is easy to see that the secant and tangent functions diverge as θ approaches π/2 (90 degrees) and that the cosecant and cotangent diverge as θ approaches zero. (Many similar constructions are possible, and the basic trigonometric identities can also be proven graphically.) SERIES DEFINITIONS ''Please note'': Here, and generally in Calculus , all angles are measured in Radian s. (See also below). Using only geometry and properties of Limits , it can be shown that the Derivative of sine is cosine and the derivative of cosine is the negative of sine. One can then use the theory of Taylor Series to show that the following identities hold for all Real Number s ''x'': : : These identities are often taken as the ''definitions'' of the sine and cosine function. They are often used as the starting point in a rigorous treatment of trigonometric functions and their applications (e.g. in Fourier Series ), since the theory of Infinite Series can be developed from the foundations of the Real Number System , independent of any geometric considerations. The Differentiability and Continuity of these functions are then established from the series definitions alone. Other series can be found (Abramowitz and Stegun 1964, Weinstein 2006):
| ||
|   | <math> {} | x + rac{x^3}{3} + rac{2 x^5}{15} + rac{17 x^7}{315} + \cdots, |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Main article: Trigonometric Identity .