




The cosine function is decreasing on the interval as shown below
As with the sine function, we must also restrict the domain of the cosine function in order to have an inverse cosine function.
The restricted domain would be: [-1,1]
The range would be:
This graph would look like this....
REFERENCE ANGLES
Definition: Letθ be an angle in standard position. Its REFERENCE ANGLE is the acute angleθ'formed by the TERMINAL SIDE ofθ and the HORIZONTAL AXIS.
In short terms, Reference Angles are always Acute and every angle has one. The reference angle is the angle formed between the horizontal X-axis and the terminal side of the angle that intersects the origin.
In order to find reference
angles you need to determine which quadrant you want the reference angle to be in.
Different Reference Angles exist in all of the 4 quadrants. The
way to find out the reference angle in the designated quadrant is in the following
formulas.
In quadrant 1
:
In quadrant 2:
In quadrant 3:
In quadrant 4:
The Six Trigonometric Functions
There are three different lengths of a triangle. One is the side opposite theta, the second is the side adjacent theta, and the last is the hypotenuse (opposite of the right angle). The lengths of these sides can be used to determine the Six Trigonometric Functions which include:
Sine- Opposite/Hypotenuse
Cosine- Adjacent/Hypotenuse
Tangent- Opposite/Adjacent
Cosecant- 1/Sine or Hypotenuse/Opposite
Secant- 1/Cosine or Hypotenuse/Adjacent
Cotangent- 1/Tangent or Adjacent/Opposite
Here is an example of a right triangle, where "A" is theta.
Hyp-5
Opp-3
Adj-4
Given these numbers for the side lengths and the definitions above, we can find out any of these Six Trigonometric Functions like so:
Sin= 3/5
Cos= 4/5
Tan= 3/4
Csc= 5/3
Sec= 5/4
Cot= 4/3