Property
Algebraic patterns can simplify trigonometric expressions.
Difference of Squares: An expression like a2−b2=(a−b)(a+b) can apply to expressions such as sin2x−1 or 4sec2θ−9.
Quadratic Form: An expression like 2cos2θ+cosθ−1 is in the form 2x2+x−1 where x=cosθ, and can be factored.
Examples
- Rewrite 9cos2θ−1 using the difference of squares. This is (3cosθ)2−12, which factors to (3cosθ−1)(3cosθ+1).
- Factor 2sin2θ+sinθ−1. Letting x=sinθ, the expression becomes 2x2+x−1, which factors to (2x−1)(x+1). So, the original expression is (2sinθ−1)(sinθ+1).
- Simplify (secx+1)(secx−1). This follows the difference of squares pattern, resulting in sec2x−1, which simplifies to tan2x by the Pythagorean identity.
Explanation
Don't forget your algebra skills! Recognizing familiar patterns like the difference of squares or quadratic equations is a secret weapon. It makes complex-looking trigonometric problems much easier to factor, simplify, and solve.