- Joined
- Jun 27, 2021
- Messages
- 5,386
- Reaction score
- 422
David Cohen
prove that sin(A-B)/sin(A+B)=(a^2+b^2)/c^2
use identities:
sin(A-B)=sin(A) cos(B) - cos(A) sin(B)
sin(A+B)=sin(A) cos(B) + cos(A) sin(B)
sin(A-B)/sin(A+B)=(sin(A) cos(B) - cos(A) sin(B))/(sin(A) cos(B) + cos(A) sin(B))
sin(A-B)/sin(A+B)=(2ac*cos(B)-2bc*cos(A))/(2ac*cos(B)+2bc*cos(A))
sin(A-B)/sin(A+B)=(a^2-b^2+c^2-(-a^2+b^2+c^2))/((a^2-b^2+c^2)+(-a^2+b^2+c^2))
sin(A-B)/sin(A+B)=(a^2-b^2+c^2+a^2-b^2-c^2)/(a^2-b^2+c^2-a^2+b^2+c^2)
sin(A-B)/sin(A+B)=(2a^2-2b^2)/(2c^2)
sin(A-B)/sin(A+B)=(a^2-b^2)/c^2