Calculus (3rd Edition)

Published by W. H. Freeman
ISBN 10: 1464125260
ISBN 13: 978-1-46412-526-3

Chapter 1 - Precalculus Review - 1.4 Trigonometric Functions - Exercises - Page 30: 17

Answer

The proof is as shown below.

Work Step by Step

Consider the figure given below. Now, we have $\tan\theta=c$ for the right angled triangle $ABC$. By definition, $\tan\theta=\dfrac{\text{Perpendicular with respect to angle }\theta}{\text{Base with respect to the angle }\theta}=\dfrac{AB}{BC}$, so, we get $\dfrac{AB}{BC}=c$, or, $AB=c\cdot BC$. Now, using the Pythagorean Theorem in the triangle $ABC$: $(AC)^2=(AB)^2+(AC)^2$ $\implies (AC)^2=(c\cdot BC)^2+(BC)^2$ $\implies (AC)^2=c^2 (BC)^2+(BC)^2$ [Using exponent rule] $\implies (AC)^2=(c^2+1)(BC)^2$ $\implies \dfrac{(AC)^2}{(BC)^2}=c^2+1$ $\implies \dfrac{(AC)^2}{(BC)^2}=c^2+1$ [Taking square root on both sides] $\implies \dfrac{AC}{BC}=\sqrt{c^2+1}$ $\implies \dfrac{BC}{AC}=\dfrac{1}{\sqrt{c^2+1}}$ By definition, $\cos\theta=\dfrac{\text{Base with respect to angle }\theta}{\text{Hypotenuse}}=\dfrac{BC}{AC}=\dfrac{1}{\sqrt{c^2+1}}$, hence, proved.
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