KnowledgeBoat Logo
|

Mathematics

Prove the following identity, where the angles involved are acute angles for which the trigonometric ratios as defined:

sin A1+cot Acos A1+tan A\dfrac{\text{sin }A}{1 + \text{cot }A} - \dfrac{\text{cos }A}{1 + \text{tan }A} = sin A - cos A

Trigonometric Identities

7 Likes

Answer

The L.H.S of above equation can be written as,

sin A(1+cot A)cos A(1+tan A)sin A(1+cos Asin A)cos A(1+sin Acos A)sin A(sin A+cos Asin A)cos A(cos A+sin Acos A)sin A×sin Asin A+cos Acos A×cos Acos A+sin Asin 2Acos 2Asin A+cos A(sin Acos A)(sin A+cos A)sin A+cos Asin Acos A.\Rightarrow \dfrac{\text{sin }A}{(1 + \text{cot }A)} - \dfrac{\text{cos }A}{(1 + \text{tan }A)} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{\text{sin }A}{\Big(1 + \dfrac{\text{cos }A}{\text{sin }A}\Big)} - \dfrac{\text{cos }A}{\Big(1 + \dfrac{\text{sin }A}{\text{cos }A}\Big)} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{\text{sin }A}{\Big(\dfrac{\text{sin }A + \text{cos }A}{\text{sin }A}\Big)} - \dfrac{\text{cos }A}{\Big(\dfrac{\text{cos }A + \text{sin }A}{\text{cos }A} \Big)} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{\text{sin }A \times \text{sin }A}{\text{sin }A + \text{cos }A} - \dfrac{\text{cos }A \times \text{cos }A}{\text{cos }A + \text{sin }A} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{\text{sin }^2A - \text{cos }^2A}{\text{sin }A + \text{cos }A}\\[1em] \Rightarrow \dfrac{(\text{sin }A - \text{cos }A)(\text{sin }A + \text{cos }A)}{\text{sin }A + \text{cos }A}\\[1em] \Rightarrow \text{sin }A - \text{cos }A.

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

Hence, proved sin A(1+cot A)cos A(1+tan A)\dfrac{\text{sin }A}{(1 + \text{cot }A)} - \dfrac{\text{cos }A}{(1 + \text{tan }A)} = sin A - cos A

Answered By

3 Likes


Related Questions