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If theta is in quadrant II and cos theta= -3/5, what is sin 2 theta + cos 2 theta?

User Marco Panichi
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1 Answer

29 votes
29 votes

ANSWER

sin(2θ) + cos(2θ) = -31/25 = -1.24

Step-by-step explanation

If we do the inverse of the cosine to -3/5 we would get the angle θ. Then we can know the value of the sine:


\sin \theta=\sin (\cos ^(-1)(-(3)/(5)))=(4)/(5)

So we have:

• sin(θ) = 4/5

,

• cos(θ) = -3/5

To find sin(2θ) + cos(2θ) we'll have to use the trigonometric identities:


\begin{gathered} \sin 2\theta=2\sin \theta\cos \theta \\ \cos 2\theta=1-2\sin ^2\theta \end{gathered}

Since we have the sine and cosine of theta, we can solve this:


\sin 2\theta=2\cdot(4)/(5)\cdot(-(3)/(5))=-(24)/(25)
\cos 2\theta=1-2((4)/(5))^2=1-2\cdot(16)/(25)=1-(32)/(25)=-(7)/(25)

The sum is:


\sin 2\theta+\cos 2\theta=-(24)/(25)-(7)/(25)=-(31)/(25)=-1.24

User Emirhan Selim Uzun
by
2.9k points