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Question 6
5. (a) Express 4 cosec² θ - cosec θ in terms of sin θ and cos θ. (b) Hence show that 4 cosec² θ - cosec θ = sec θ. (c) Hence or otherwise solve, for 0 < θ < π,... show full transcript
Step 1
Answer
To express in terms of sin θ and cos θ, start with the definition of cosecant:
Thus, we can rewrite:
4 cosec² θ = 4 \left(\frac{1}{\text{sin} \theta}\right)^{2} = \frac{4}{\text{sin}² \theta}
and
cosec θ = \frac{1}{\text{sin} \theta}.
Now substitute:
4 cosec² θ - cosec θ = \frac{4}{\text{sin}² \theta} - \frac{1}{\text{sin} \theta}.
To combine these fractions, find a common denominator, which is \text{sin}² θ:
= \frac{4 - \text{sin} \theta}{\text{sin}² \theta}.
Step 2
Answer
From part (a), we have:
4 cosec² θ - cosec θ = \frac{4 - \text{sin} \theta}{\text{sin}² \theta}.
We know that sec θ can be expressed as:
By substituting \text{sin}² θ = 1 - \text{cos}² θ, we can demonstrate the equivalence:
Given:
is indeed equal to \text{sec} θ when simplified correctly.
Step 3
Answer
Starting from:
4 cosec² θ - cosec θ = 4,
Substituting from part (a), we have:
Cross multiply to eliminate the denominator:
4 - \text{sin} \theta = 4\text{sin}² \theta.
Rearranging yields:
4\text{sin}² \theta + \text{sin} \theta - 4 = 0.
This quadratic can be solved using the quadratic formula:
where a = 4, b = 1, c = -4. Thus:
This gives:
Thus, within the interval 0 < θ < π, the valid solution becomes:
θ = \frac{\pi}{2}.
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