Reciprocal Identities in Trigonometry (Precalculus - Trigonometry 9)
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- Опубліковано 27 вер 2024
- How the reciprocal identities in trigonometry work and how to use them. The major focus will be on connecting the ideas of a Unit circle with Right Triangle Trigonometry.
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I clicked on that notification so fast! I love trigonometry
I grew up hating trig.... now I teach it and it's one of my favourite parts of mathematics (Especially when combined with calculus)
THANK YOU Professor Leonard! Your videos are saving me in my trig class this term, I feel like my teacher is having us teach ourselves. Needed this :)
Nice first time I found a video on the same day it posted!
Thank you so much Professor for continuing the precalculus playlist. It really warms my heart that kind people like you are providing us with wholesome content. And although there might not be many views or likes, we really enjoy your videos and methods to solving mathematics. My teachers back in school mostly would inform us about the laws and formulas without explaining them, but you make sure that we understand everything. Honestly may God bless you, please keep making these awesome lessons.
I'm astonished as there are no much recent comments really love this
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Brilliant lesson, thank you! I'm well past school now but this is the first time those connections are actually being made!! Really looking forward to the next video in this series.
some serious guns and well explained trigonometry in one video! Thank you so much!
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40:10 I paused the video 1 min earlier and spent ages on this problem because I was doing my damnedest to figure out how sin(theta)
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Professor Leonard is there anyway you can do Discrete Mathematics series for computer science students
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You lost me at the part where you said angle is in Q II. I didnt get it :( i tried to rewatch, still dont get it how it became negative? Sin is 12/13. theres no signs here, i thought its supposed to be positive
It is because he is trying to find Cos. Cos = x on the unit circle. In Q II x is negative, Therefore Cos is negative.That’s why he chooses the negative answer. I’m sure you’ve already figured this out but just in case! 32:44
Your videos are amazing. However, why don't you write steps on the board for students to easy follow what to do?
Can anyone give a really good explanation of WHY the reciprocal of sine is not called secant, and why the reciprocal of cosine is not called cosecant????
EDIT: Actually now that I think about it, cotangent is the reciprocal of tangent. Therefore cosine should be the reciprocal of sine. Secant should be the one that is defined as "adjacent over hypotenuse," and cosecant should be the reciprocal of secant!
WHO'S WITH ME ON THIS?? Gimme a like!
cosine is complimentary of sine ( sin60 =cos 30 combining both will give 90degree)
Hell yeah
I think whoever gave the inverse trig functions their names did a terrible job at it....I mean it would make so much sense if co+secant would be the inverse of co+sine, I mean if you take out the "co" you're literally left with sine and secant
that's my thought too, i dont know who named them, but they definitely did a very bad job
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Professor Leonard ,thank you for another fantastic video/lecture on Reciprocal Identities in Trigonometry. The Identities linked all Trigonometry functions together from start to finish. These Identities are used continuously in Science and Engineering.
I’m happy seeing you uploading videos and doing great, thank you professor 🤍
Why not choose x=5 (positive 5)
What textbook is used as reference for this precalc playlist?
He uses "Precalculus Concepts through Functions - A Unit Circle Approach to Trigonometry" 4th edition by Sullivan in his classes.
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Seems a little confusing in the last example that sin=y and y=-sqrt(3) but sin=-sqrt(3)/2.
sin=y is when the radius is 1. When the radius is 1, we have sin=y/1 - this is the same as sin=y, hence we omit the denominator. In the case of the last problem, the radius is 2, not 1, therefore we would have sin=y/2 or sin=-sqrt(3)/2
@@hris894 okay thank you for the clarification
Ummmm, where do you teach?
California I think
Ah no comments
I was actually first too
Youre currently saving my life with calc 3 thank you!