Textbooks offer a well-known standard method (see faisal's method below). I'll do it slightly differently. Sketching a right angled-triangle with sides 1 and sqrt(3) and therefore hypotenuse =2 will help.Hey guys I'm having a bit of difficulty with this question:
Write the expression cosy - (sqroot of 3) x siny in the form: r cos(y + a)
Thanks
R = square root of (1^2 + (root3)^2) = 2. your angle is just tanA = root3. Therefore A = pi/3.Hey guys I'm having a bit of difficulty with this question:
Write the expression cosy - (sqroot of 3) x siny in the form: r cos(y + a)
Thanks
Thanks, that's a good method .Textbooks offer a well-known standard method. I'll do it slightly differently. Sketching a right angled-triangle with sides 1 and sqrt(3) and therefore hypotenuse =2 will help.
ThanksR = square root of (1^2 + (root3)^2) = 2. your angle is just tanA = root3. Therefore A = pi/3.
2cos(y+pi/3)
It'd be good if you did an example .A quicker way to getting the angle rather than doing the double angle thingy for cos, is just doing sin/cos = the coefficient of sin/ coefficient of cos. Its a quick trick way to getting the angle quickly. Im not sure if you understood what i just said, hard to explain aha