asked 145k views
0 votes
Sec(x+1)/tan(x) = tan(x)/sec(x-1)


( \sec(x + 1) )/( \tan(x) ) = ( \tan(x) )/( \sec(x - 1) )

asked
User Greggles
by
8.3k points

1 Answer

5 votes

a couple of cheap answers to this one will be



\bf \cfrac{sec(x+1)}{tan(x)}=\cfrac{tan(x)}{sec(x-1)} \\\\[-0.35em] ~\dotfill\\\\ \cfrac{~~(1)/(cos(x+1))~~}{(sin(x))/(cos(x))}\implies \cfrac{1}{cos(x+1)}\cdot \cfrac{cos(x)}{sin(x)}\implies \cfrac{cos(x)}{sin(x)[cos(x+1)]}\\e \cfrac{tan(x)}{sec(x-1)}


another way to check that will be, doing both sides, left and right.



\bf \cfrac{sec(x+1)}{tan(x)}=\cfrac{tan(x)}{sec(x-1)}\implies sec(x+1)sec(x-1)=tan^2(x) \\\\\\ \begin{array}{llll} \cfrac{1}{cos(x+1)cos(x-1)}&=\cfrac{sin^2(x)}{cos^2(x)} \\\\\\ \cfrac{1}{[cos(x)cos(1)-sin(x)sin(1)]~~[cos(x)cos(1)+sin(x)sin(1)]} \\\\\\ \cfrac{1}{[cos(x)cos(1)]^2-[sin(x)sin(1)]^2} \\\\\\ \cfrac{1}{cos^2(x)cos^2(1)-sin^2(x)sin^2(1)}&\\e \cfrac{sin^2(x)}{cos^2(x)} \end{array}


you can also try graphing both, the left and right side independently, and notice that there's no match.

answered
User DJo
by
8.5k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.