Simplify

towasen

New member
Joined
Jan 8, 2006
Messages
4
Hello ppl, I really need some help on this.



Answer is C

How do I simplify it to get 2cox12X
 
It can't be an identity without an = in it.

The only simplification(?) I can see is the sum of angles
cos(a+b)=cos(a)cos(b)-sin(a)(sin(b)
=
cos(6x)cos(-2)-sin(6x)sin(-2) =
cos(6x)cos(2)+sin(6x)sin(2)

Are you sure it is 4cos^2(6x-2) and that's all? I don't see it getting simpler when you square that mess but that would be the next step.
 
Hi Gene, what I meant was do I use basic identities to simplify this.

You used the Sum and Difference Identity, but there's no sin in the original equation. I'm confuse.
 
towasen said:
You used the Sum and Difference Identity, but there's no sin in the original equation.
There is a sine in the cosine angle-difference identity. Check your book.

Eliz.
 
Is the expression \(\displaystyle \L
4\cos ^2 (6x - 2)\) or is it \(\displaystyle \L
4\cos ^2 (6x) - 2\) ??????

Why is it that posters will not use function notation for trigonometric functions?
 
pka said:
Is the expression \(\displaystyle \L
4\cos ^2 (6x - 2)\) or is it \(\displaystyle \L
4\cos ^2 (6x) - 2\) ??????

Why is it that posters will not use function notation for trigonometric functions?


43205952c64d076a7dd615dac8601f5d.gif
 
\(\displaystyle \L
\4cos ^2 (6x - 2) = 4\left( {\cos (6x - 2)} \right)^2 = 4\left( {\cos (6x)\cos ( - 2) - \sin (6x)\sin ( - 2)} \right)^2\)

How much more messy do you want it to be?
We can square that out!
 
Are you saying that is the answer?

But the answer should be 2cos12X

Here's the question:

 
Arghhh. Ya got me. I made a bad assumption. It is
4cos²(6x)-2 =
2(cos²(6x)+cos²(6x)-1) =
2(cos²(6x)-sin²(6x)) =
2cos(12x)
Using the double angle formula backwards.
It even fooled you. :oops:
 
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