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Example Questions
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
Simplify (cosΘ – sinΘ)2
1 + sin2Θ
sin2Θ – 1
1 – sin2Θ
cos2Θ – 1
1 + cos2Θ
1 – sin2Θ
Multiply out the quadratic equation to get cosΘ2 – 2cosΘsinΘ + sinΘ2
Then use the following trig identities to simplify the expression:
sin2Θ = 2sinΘcosΘ
sinΘ2 + cosΘ2 = 1
1 – sin2Θ is the correct answer for (cosΘ – sinΘ)2
1 + sin2Θ is the correct answer for (cosΘ + sinΘ)2
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
Which of the following represents a cosine function with a range of to
?
The range of a cosine wave is altered by the coefficient placed in front of the base equation. So, if you have , this means that the highest point on the wave will be at
and the lowest at
; however, if you then begin to shift the equation vertically by adding values, as in,
, then you need to account for said shift. This would make the minimum value to be
and the maximum value to be
.
For our question, the range of values covers . This range is accomplished by having either
or
as your coefficient. (
merely flips the equation over the
-axis. The range "spread" remains the same.) We need to make the upper value to be
instead of
. To do this, you will need to subtract
, or
, from
. This requires an downward shift of
. An example of performing a shift like this is:
Among the possible answers, the one that works is:
The parameter does not matter, as it only alters the frequency of the function.
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
Which of the following represents a cosine function with a range from to
?
The range of a cosine wave is altered by the coefficient placed in front of the base equation. So, if you have , this means that the highest point on the wave will be at
and the lowest at
; however, if you then begin to shift the equation vertically by adding values, as in,
, then you need to account for said shift. This would make the minimum value to be
and the maximum value to be
.
For our question, the range of values covers . This range is accomplished by having either
or
as your coefficient. (
merely flips the equation over the
-axis. The range "spread" remains the same.) We need to make the upper value to be
instead of
. This requires an upward shift of
. An example of performing a shift like this is:
Among the possible answers, the one that works is:
Example Question #4 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
What is the range of the trigonometric function defined by ?
The range of a sine or cosine function spans from the negative amplitude to the positive amplitutde. The amplutide is given by in the equation
. Thus the range for our function is
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
What is the range of the given trigonometric equation:
For the sine and cosine funcitons, the range is equal to the negative amplitude to the positive amplitude.
The amplitude is found by taking from the general equation:
.
We see in our equation that
(when no coefficient is written, it is a 1).
Thus we get that the amplitude is
Example Question #6 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
What is the range of the function ?
There is no valid range for this equation.
The range of the function represents the spread of possible answers you can get for , given all values of
. In this case, the ordinary range for a cosine function is
, since the largest value that cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values), and the smallest value cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values).
However, in this case our final answer is increased by after the cosine is applied to
. This results in a final range of
to
(or, in other words,
to
, plus
).
So, our final range is .
Example Question #7 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
What is the range of the function ?
There is no range that fits this equation.
The range of the function represents the spread of possible answers you can get for , given all values of
. In this case, the ordinary range for a cosine function is
, since the largest value that cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values), and the smallest value cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values).
However, in this case our final answer is multiplied by -3 after the cosine is applied to . This results in a final range of
to
(or, in other words,
to
, multiplied by
).
So, our final range is .
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
What is the range of the function ?
There is no range that fits this function.
The range of the function represents the spread of possible answers you can get for , given all values of
. In this case, the ordinary range for a cosine function is
, since the largest value that cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values), and the smallest value cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values).
However, in this case our final answer is first multiplied by , then decreased by
after the cosine is applied to
. Multiplying the initial
range by
results in a new range of
. Next, subtracting
from this range gives us a new range of
.
Note that the does not change our range. This is because, irrespective of other multipliers, a cosine operation can only return values between
and
. To think of this a different way,
will give us the same returns as
, only we will move around the unit circle five times as much before finding our answer.
Thus, our final range is .
Example Question #151 : Trigonometry
Which of the following functions has a range of ?
None of these have the specified range.
The range of the function represents the spread of possible answers you can get for , given all values of
. In this case, the ordinary range for a cosine function is
, since the largest value that cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values), and the smallest value cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values).
One fast way to match a range to a function is to look for the function which has a vertical shift equal to the mean of the range values. In other words, for the standard trigonometric function , where
represents the vertical shift,
.
In this case, since our range is , we expect our
to be
.
Of the answer choices, only has
, so we know this is our correct choice.
Example Question #10 : How To Find The Range Of The Cosine
Which of the following functions has a range of ?
None of these formulas has the specified range.
The range of the function represents the spread of possible answers you can get for , given all values of
. In this case, the ordinary range for a cosine function is
, since the largest value that cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values), and the smallest value cosine can solve to is
(for a cosine of
or a multiple of one of those values).
One fast way to match a range to a function is to look for the function which has a vertical shift equal to the mean of the range values. In other words, for the standard trigonometric function , where
represents the vertical shift,
.
In this case, since our range is , we expect our
to be
.
Of the answer choices, only has
, so we know this is our correct choice.
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