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I need help with this, having trouble solving It is a practice trigonometry problem from my ACT prep guide

I need help with this, having trouble solving It is a practice trigonometry problem-example-1
User Sootsnoot
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1 Answer

14 votes
14 votes

Given the expression:


(\tan(-(2\pi)/(3)))/(\sin((7\pi)/(4)))-\sec (-\pi)

Let's find the exact value of the expression.

• First rewrite tan(-2π/3) in terms of sines and cosines.

We have:


((\sin(-(2\pi)/(3)))/(\cos(-(2\pi)/(3))))/(\sin((7\pi)/(4)))-\sec (-\pi)

• Now, rewrite in product form:


\begin{gathered} (\sin(-(2\pi)/(3)))/(\cos(-(2\pi)/(3))*\sin((7\pi)/(4)))-\sec (-\pi) \\ \\ \end{gathered}

Apply the reference angles by finding the angle suing the equivalent trigonomteric values.

We have:


\begin{gathered} (\sin((4\pi)/(3)))/(\cos((4\pi)/(3))(-\sin((\pi)/(4)))-\sec (-\pi) \\ \\ (-\sin((\pi)/(3)))/(-\cos((\pi)/(3))(-(\sin\pi)/(4)))-\sec (-\pi) \end{gathered}

Substitute each trig value with the exact value:


\begin{gathered} \frac{-\frac{\sqrt[]{3}}{2}}{-(1)/(2)*(-1\frac{\sqrt[]{2}}{2})}-\sec (-\pi) \\ \\ \frac{-\frac{\sqrt[]{3}}{2}}{-((-1)/(2)*\frac{\sqrt[]{2}}{2})_{}}-\sec (-\pi) \\ \\ \frac{-\frac{\sqrt[]{3}}{2}}{-(-\frac{\sqrt[]{2}}{4})}--\sec (0) \\ \\ \frac{-\sqrt[]{3}*4}{2*\sqrt[]{2}}--\sec (0) \\ \\ \frac{-2\sqrt[]{3}}{\sqrt[]{2}}--\sec (0) \\ \\ \end{gathered}

Rationalize the denominator:


\begin{gathered} \frac{-2\sqrt[]{3}}{\sqrt[]{2}}*\frac{\sqrt[]{2}}{\sqrt[]{2}}+\sec (0) \\ \\ -\sqrt[]{3*2}+\sec (0) \\ \\ -\sqrt[]{6}+\sec (0) \end{gathered}

Where:

sec(0) = 1


\begin{gathered} -\sqrt[]{6}+1 \\ \\ \end{gathered}

ANSWER:


\begin{gathered} \\ -\text{ }\sqrt[]{6}+1 \end{gathered}

User Sluggerdog
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