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Pre Calc Chapters 5 and 6

Pre Calc Chapters 5 and 6. Trigonometric Functions of Real Numbers. The Unit Circle—5.1. Q: What do you get if you cross a mountain climber with a mosquito?. A: Nothing, you can’t cross a scalar with a vector. The Unit Circle.

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Pre Calc Chapters 5 and 6

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  1. Pre Calc Chapters 5 and 6 Trigonometric Functions of Real Numbers

  2. The Unit Circle—5.1 Q: What do you get if you cross a mountain climber with a mosquito? A: Nothing, you can’t cross a scalar with a vector

  3. The Unit Circle • The Unit Circle of radius 1 centered at the origin in the xy-plane. It’s equation is:

  4. The Unit Circle Standard Position:

  5. The Unit Circle • Is the point is on the unit circle??

  6. The Unit Circle Measured in Radians: Why does 2π=360⁰ Think Circumference!

  7. The Unit Circle Moving around the unit circle

  8. The Unit Circle Terminal Point: The point P(x , y) obtained by traveling from the point (1 , 0)

  9. Reference Points • The reference number is the shortest distance along the unit circle between the terminal point and the x-axis • Makes finding the corresponding ordered pairs easier to find!

  10. Reference Points

  11. Reference Points

  12. Reference Points

  13. p.416 #1-3, 5-7, 11-18, 23-25

  14. Trigonometric Functions of Real Numbers—5.2 Three statisticians went duck hunting. A duck was approaching and the first statistician shot, and missed the duck by being a foot too high. The second shot and was a foot too low. The third cried, "We hit it!"

  15. Trig Functions

  16. Trig Functions Soh Cah Toa

  17. Trig Functions • Let • Find sin(t) • Find cos(t) • Find tan(t)

  18. Trig Functions Let t be any real number and let P(x,y) be a point on the unit circle: We can then define our trig functions as follows:

  19. Trig Functions

  20. Trig Functions

  21. Trig Functions: Using the Unit Circle

  22. Trig Functions: Using the Unit Circle

  23. Trig Functions: Using the Unit Circle Using the point

  24. Domain of Trig Functions • Sine, cosine • All Real Numbers • Tangent, Secant • All Real Numbers except for any integer n • Cotangent, Cosecant • All real numbers other than for any integer n

  25. Signs of Trig Functions

  26. Signs of Trig Functions All Students Take Calculus Sine All Tells us which values are positive Tangent Cosine

  27. Even and Odd Functions • Even: • Sine, Cosecant, Tangent, and Cotangent • Odd: • Cosine and secant

  28. So…What does that mean? • Tells us the sign of each function, based on the quadrant it is in! • Ex: consider • Sin, cos, tan, etc.

  29. p.426 # 3-22, 27-29

  30. Trig Functions—5.3 • There are 10 types of people in this world… …those who understand binary and those who don’t

  31. Graphing Trig Functions

  32. Periodic Functions • A function f is periodic iff there is a positive number p such that for every t • The smallest of these numbers p is called the period of the function

  33. Periodic Functions • Think terminal points • …every 2pi units around the circle, you are at the same point so the function evaluated at those points will be the same

  34. Sine and Cosine Curves • These two functions are often referred to as sinusoidal curves

  35. Sine and Cosine Curves • General form of sine and cosine: • Amplitude: • Period: • phase shift: b • Vertical shift: c

  36. Sine Functions

  37. Cosine Functions

  38. Can sin(x) be made to look like cos(x)?

  39. p.439 #1-25 Odd

  40. Trig Functions and Asymptotes—5.4 Q: How do we know the fractions are all European? A: Because they are all over C’s!

  41. Tangent and Cotangent Graphs • Tangent and Cotangent both have a period of • In other words:

  42. Where Do Asymptotes Occur? • At what values can Tan not be evaluated? • So we can say…

  43. Tangent

  44. Cot(x)

  45. Modifying Graphs of Tan and Cot • Period • Amplitude • Phase Shift b • Vertical Shift c

  46. Cosecant and Secant • csc and sec graphs have a period of • In other words:

  47. Csc(x)

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