Of course. How silly of me. Values of cos can only vary from -1 to 1.The domain, or x should be from -1 to 1.
btw the answer in the text book (the range) is from (-pi) to less than (pi/2).
The domain of inverse cosine is -1 < x < 1.How would you find the range of y= xcos^-1 x ??
What would happen if you were to approximate the root of that equation and keep approximating and subbing in, and observe what it approaches? Should in theory approach pi/2?Since the domain is -1 ≤ x ≤ 1, what you would typically do is substitute the end points of the domain to find the range. However, this assumes that the function you're dealing with is monotonic increasing or decreasing (i.e. has no turning points).
In this particular question, there happens to be a maximum turning point. The problem is that you can't really find the roots of this equation:
to determine the maximum turning point. So the exact upper limit is hard to find.
Where did you get these figures from?it's not gonna really get anywhere near pi/2
max: x=0.6522, y=0.5611
graphmaticaWhere did you get these figures from?
the range would be the inverse of cosxHow would you find the range of y= xcos^-1 x ??
?the range would be the inverse of cosx
cosx:
domain: 0≤ x≤ pi
range: -1≤y≤1
therefore the inverse is:
xcos^-1 is
domain:-1≤x≤1
range:0≤y≤pi
what's hard 2 understand lol
Look at the graph above, the x dilates it.what's hard 2 understand lol
u just swap the range and domain around when it comes 2 inverse =p
=)^ooooooooooooo i see