77.6k views
23 votes
You should be able to find this
without a calculator.
cos(cos-¹ 0.3) = [?]

You should be able to find this without a calculator. cos(cos-¹ 0.3) = [?]-example-1

2 Answers

12 votes


\frak{Hi!}


\large\text{Related Concept-:}


\boxed{\begin{minipage}{10cm} \sf{If\;you\;take\;the\;inverse\;cosine}\\ \;of\;a\;number,\;and\;then\;take\; its\;cosine,\;don't\;you\;get\;the\;number \\ you started with? \end{minipage}}

Clarification

The inverse cosine and the cosine are operations that undo each other.

This being said, let's solve our problem.


\bf{cos(cos^(-1)\;0.3)=0.3, based on what I said above


\cal{CALLIGRAPHY}

User Szaske
by
8.7k points
2 votes

Hello:

Let's consider this problem in steps:

Let's gather some information:

  • cosine and arccosine cancel each other out in this case

Now let's apply our knowledge to solve the problem:


\rm \hookrightarrow cos(cos^(-1)0.3) = 0.3

Answer: 0.3

Hopefully that helps!

User Nathan Loding
by
8.6k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories