Trigonometric formulas
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7. Angle sum and difference identities
These are also known as the addition and subtraction theorems or formulae . The identities can be derived by combining right triangles ...
4. Pythagorean identity
In trigonometry, the basic relationship between the sine and the cosine is known as the Pythagorean identity: {\displaystyle \sin ^{2}\...
6. Symmetry, shifts, and periodicity
By examining the unit circle, the following properties of the trigonometric functions can be established. Symmetry When the trigon...
Showing posts with label
Certain linear fractional transformations
.
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Showing posts with label
Certain linear fractional transformations
.
Show all posts
Friday, November 18, 2016
14. Certain linear fractional transformations
If
f
(
x
)
is given by the linear fractional transformation
{\displaystyle f(x)={\frac {(\cos \alpha )x-\sin \alpha }{(\sin \alpha )x+\cos \alpha }},}
and similarly
{\displaystyle g(x)={\frac {(\cos \beta )x-\sin \beta }{(\sin \beta )x+\cos \beta }},}
then
{\displaystyle f{\big (}g(x){\big )}=g{\big (}f(x){\big )}={\frac {{\big (}\cos(\alpha +\beta ){\big )}x-\sin(\alpha +\beta )}{{\big (}\sin(\alpha +\beta ){\big )}x+\cos(\alpha +\beta )}}.}
More tersely stated, if for all
α
we let
f
α
be what we called
f
above, then
{\displaystyle f_{\alpha }\circ f_{\beta }=f_{\alpha +\beta }.\,}
If
x
is the slope of a line, then
f
(
x
)
is the slope of its rotation through an angle of
−
α
.
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and periodicity
Angle sum and difference identities
Angles
Calculus
Certain linear fractional transformations
Composition of trigonometric functions
Exponential definitions
Historical shorthands
Identities without variables
Infinite product formulae
Inverse functions
Inverse trigonometric functions
Lagrange's trigonometric identities
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Multiple-angle formulae
Other sums of trigonometric functions
Power-reduction formula
Product-to-sum and sum-to-product identities
Pythagorean identity
Relation to the complex exponential function
shifts
Symmetry
Trigonometric functions
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