KnowledgeBoat Logo
|

Mathematics

Prove the following identity:

(secA1secA+1)=(1cosA1+cosA)\Big(\dfrac{\sec A - 1}{\sec A + 1}\Big) = \Big(\dfrac{1 - \cos A}{1 + \cos A}\Big)

Trigonometric Identities

5 Likes

Answer

Solving L.H.S:

secA1secA+11cosA11cosA+11cosAcosA1+cosAcosA(1cosA)×cosA(1+cosA)×cosA1cosA1+cosA.\Rightarrow \dfrac{\sec A - 1}{\sec A + 1} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{\dfrac{1}{\cos A} - 1}{\dfrac{1}{\cos A} + 1} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{\dfrac{1 - \cos A}{\cos A}}{\dfrac{1 + \cos A}{\cos A}} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{(1 - \cos A) \times \cos A}{(1 + \cos A) \times \cos A} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{1 - \cos A}{1 + \cos A}.

Since, L.H.S. = R.H.S.

Hence, proved that (secA1secA+1)=(1cosA1+cosA)\Big(\dfrac{\sec A - 1}{\sec A + 1}\Big) = \Big(\dfrac{1 - \cos A}{1 + \cos A}\Big).

Answered By

2 Likes


Related Questions