proving an identity

xc630

Junior Member
Joined
Sep 1, 2005
Messages
164
Hi I need some help proving this identity

(1- tan^2x) / (1+tan^2x) = cos 2x

I tried replacing (1+tan^2x) with sec^2x and cross multiplied but I didn't get very far. I would appreciate any help. Thanks.
 
Tan^2(x) = sec^2(x) -1 but I don't undersatand where you are going with it
 
I was thinking of two possible answers. You have chosen one of them. Go with it. 1 - tan^2(x) = 1 - ( . . .
 
Ok so I have:

1-tan^2(x)= cos 2x (sec^2x)

Then

1-tan^2(x) = 2cos^2(x)-1 (sec^2x)

Where should I go from here?
 
We do not know that equality holds, so deal with one side at a time.

LHS = [1 - (sec^2(x) - 1)]/(sec^2(x))

Show this equals the RHS.
 
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