I think the awnser that will the most corrupt is D
Answer:
- sin(x) = 1
- cos(x) = 0
- cot(x) = 0
- csc(x) = 1
- sec(x) = undefined
Step-by-step explanation:
The tangent function can be considered to be the ratio of the sine and cosine functions:
tan(x) = sin(x)/cos(x)
It will be undefined where cos(x) = 0. The values of x where that occurs are odd multiples of π. The smallest such multiple is x=π/2. The value of the sine function there is positive: sin(π/2) = 1.
The corresponding trig function values are ...
tan(x) = undefined (where sin(x) >0)
sin(x) = 1
cos(x) = 0
__
And the reciprocal function values at x=π/2 are ...
cot(x) = 0 . . . . . . 1/tan(x)
csc(x) = 1 . . . . . . .1/sin(x)
sec(x) = undefined . . . . . 1/cos(x)
Sorry, I didn't quite understand the question here is a clear one, it was made by me personally in the geo-gebra application
Part A: To find the lengths of sides 1, 2, and 3, we need to add them together. We can do this by combining like terms (terms that have the same variables, or no variables).
(3y² + 2y − 6) + (3y − 7 + 4y²) + (−8 + 5y² + 4y)
We can now group them.
(3y² + 4y² + 5y²) + (2y + 3y + 4y) + (-6 - 7 - 8)
Now we simplify
12y² + 9y - 21
Part B: To find the length of the 4th side, we need to subtract the combined length of the 3 sides we know from the total length (perimeter).
(4y³ + 18y² + 16y − 26) - (12y² + 9y - 21)
Simplify, subtract like terms.
4y³ + (18y² - 12y²) + (16y - 9y) + (-26 + 21)
4y³ + 6y² + 7y - 5 is the length of the 4th side.
Part C (sorry for the bad explanation): A set of numbers is closed, or has closure, under a given operation if the result of the operation on any two numbers in the set is also in the set.
For example, the set of real numbers is closed under addition, because adding any two real numbers results in another real number. Likewise, the real numbers are closed under subtraction, multiplication and division (by a nonzero real number), because performing these operations on two real numbers always yields another real number.
<em>Polynomials are closed under the same operations as integers. </em>