The trigonometric functions most widely used in modern mathematics are the
sine, the
cosine, and the tangent. Their
reciprocals are respectively the cosecant, the secant, and the cotangent, which are less used. Each of these six trigonometric functions has a corresponding
inverse function, and an analog among the
hyperbolic functions.
The oldest definitions of trigonometric functions, related to right-angle triangles, define them only for
acute angles. To extend the sine and cosine functions to functions whose
domain is the whole
real line, geometrical definitions using the standard
unit circle (i.e., a circle with
radius 1 unit) are often used; then the domain of the other functions is the real line with some isolated points removed. Modern definitions express trigonometric functions as
infinite series or as solutions of
differential equations. This allows extending the domain of sine and cosine functions to the whole
complex plane, and the domain of the other trigonometric functions to the complex plane with some isolated points removed.
Notation
Conventionally, an abbreviation of each trigonometric function's name is used as its symbol in formulas. Today, the most common versions of these abbreviations are "sin" for sine, "cos" for cosine, "tan" or "tg" for tangent, "sec" for secant, "csc" or "cosec" for cosecant, and "cot" or "ctg" for cotangent. Historically, these abbreviations were first used in prose sentences to indicate particular
line segments or their lengths related to an
arc of an arbitrary circle, and later to indicate ratios of lengths, but as the
function concept developed in the 17th–18th century, they began to be considered as functions of real-number-valued angle measures, and written with
functional notation, for example sin(x). Parentheses are still often omitted to reduce clutter, but are sometimes necessary; for example the expression would typically be interpreted to mean so parentheses are required to express
A
positive integer appearing as a superscript after the symbol of the function denotes
exponentiation, not
function composition. For example and denote not This differs from the (historically later) general functional notation in which
However, the exponent is commonly used to denote the
inverse function, not the
reciprocal. For example and denote the
inverse trigonometric function alternatively written The equation implies not In this case, the superscript could be considered as denoting a composed or
iterated function, but negative superscripts other than are not in common use.
Right-angled triangle definitions
In this right triangle, denoting the measure of angle BAC as A: sin A = a/c; cos A = b/c; tan A = a/b.
Plot of the six trigonometric functions, the unit circle, and a line for the angle θ = 0.7 radians. The points labelled 1, Sec(θ), Csc(θ) represent the length of the line segment from the origin to that point. Sin(θ), Tan(θ), and 1 are the heights to the line starting from the x-axis, while Cos(θ), 1, and Cot(θ) are lengths along the x-axis starting from the origin.
If the acute angle θ is given, then any right triangles that have an angle of θ are
similar to each other. This means that the ratio of any two side lengths depends only on θ. Thus these six ratios define six functions of θ, which are the trigonometric functions. In the following definitions, the
hypotenuse is the length of the side opposite the right angle, opposite represents the side opposite the given angle θ, and adjacent represents the side between the angle θ and the right angle.[3][4]
sine
cosecant
cosine
secant
tangent
cotangent
In a right-angled triangle, the sum of the two acute angles is a right angle, that is, 90° or π/2radians. Therefore and represent the same ratio, and thus are equal. This identity and analogous relationships between the other trigonometric functions are summarized in the following table.
Top: Trigonometric function sin θ for selected angles θ, π − θ, π + θ, and 2π − θ in the four quadrants. Bottom: Graph of sine function versus angle. Angles from the top panel are identified.
Summary of relationships between trigonometric functions[5]
In geometric applications, the argument of a trigonometric function is generally the measure of an
angle. For this purpose, any
angular unit is convenient. One common unit is
degrees, in which a right angle is 90° and a complete turn is 360° (particularly in
elementary mathematics).
However, in
calculus and
mathematical analysis, the trigonometric functions are generally regarded more abstractly as functions of
real or
complex numbers, rather than angles. In fact, the functions sin and cos can be defined for all complex numbers in terms of the
exponential function, via power series,[6] or as solutions to
differential equations given particular initial values[7] (see below), without reference to any geometric notions. The other four trigonometric functions (tan, cot, sec, csc) can be defined as quotients and reciprocals of sin and cos, except where zero occurs in the denominator. It can be proved, for real arguments, that these definitions coincide with elementary geometric definitions ifthe argument is regarded as an angle given in radians.[6] Moreover, these definitions result in simple expressions for the
derivatives and
indefinite integrals for the trigonometric functions.[8] Thus, in settings beyond elementary geometry, radians are regarded as the mathematically natural unit for describing angle measures.
When
radians (rad) are employed, the angle is given as the length of the
arc of the
unit circle subtended by it: the angle that subtends an arc of length 1 on the unit circle is 1 rad (≈ 57.3°), and a complete
turn (360°) is an angle of 2π (≈ 6.28) rad. For real number x, the notations sin x, cos x, etc. refer to the value of the trigonometric functions evaluated at an angle of x rad. If units of degrees are intended, the degree sign must be explicitly shown (e.g., sin x°, cos x°, etc.). Using this standard notation, the argument x for the trigonometric functions satisfies the relationship x = (180x/π)°, so that, for example, sin π = sin 180° when we take x = π. In this way, the degree symbol can be regarded as a mathematical constant such that 1° = π/180 ≈ 0.0175.
Unit-circle definitions
In this illustration, the six trigonometric functions of an arbitrary angle θ are represented as
Cartesian coordinates of points related to the
unit circle. The ordinates of A, B and D are sin θ, tan θ and csc θ, respectively, while the abscissas of A, C and E are cos θ, cot θ and sec θ, respectively.
Signs of trigonometric functions in each quadrant. The mnemonic "allscience teachers (are) crazy" lists the functions which are positive from quadrants I to IV.[9] This is a variation on the mnemonic "
All Students Take Calculus".
The six trigonometric functions can be defined as
coordinate values of points on the
Euclidean plane that are related to the
unit circle, which is the
circle of radius one centered at the origin O of this coordinate system. While
right-angled triangle definitions allow for the definition of the trigonometric functions for angles between 0 and radians(90°), the unit circle definitions allow the domain of trigonometric functions to be extended to all positive and negative real numbers.
Let be the
ray obtained by rotating by an angle θ the positive half of the x-axis (
counterclockwise rotation for and clockwise rotation for ). This ray intersects the unit circle at the point The ray extended to a
line if necessary, intersects the line of equation at point and the line of equation at point The
tangent line to the unit circle at the point A, is
perpendicular to and intersects the y- and x-axes at points and The
coordinates of these points give the values of all trigonometric functions for any arbitrary real value of θ in the following manner.
The trigonometric functions cos and sin are defined, respectively, as the x- and y-coordinate values of point A. That is,
In the range , this definition coincides with the right-angled triangle definition, by taking the right-angled triangle to have the unit radius OA as
hypotenuse. And since the equation holds for all points on the unit circle, this definition of cosine and sine also satisfies the
Pythagorean identity.
The other trigonometric functions can be found along the unit circle as
and
and
By applying the Pythagorean identity and geometric proof methods, these definitions can readily be shown to coincide with the definitions of tangent, cotangent, secant and cosecant in terms of sine and cosine, that is
Since a rotation of an angle of does not change the position or size of a shape, the points A, B, C, D, and E are the same for two angles whose difference is an integer multiple of . Thus trigonometric functions are
periodic functions with period . That is, the equalities
and
hold for any angle θ and any
integerk. The same is true for the four other trigonometric functions. By observing the sign and the monotonicity of the functions sine, cosine, cosecant, and secant in the four quadrants, one can show that is the smallest value for which they are periodic (i.e., is the
fundamental period of these functions). However, after a rotation by an angle , the points B and C already return to their original position, so that the tangent function and the cotangent function have a fundamental period of . That is, the equalities
and
hold for any angle θ and any integer k.
Algebraic values
The
unit circle, with some points labeled with their cosine and sine (in this order), and the corresponding angles in radians and degrees.
Writing the numerators as
square roots of consecutive non-negative integers, with a denominator of 2, provides an easy way to remember the values.[11]
Such simple expressions generally do not exist for other angles which are rational multiples of a right angle.
For an angle which, measured in degrees, is a multiple of three, the
exact trigonometric values of the sine and the cosine may be expressed in terms of square roots. These values of the sine and the cosine may thus be constructed by
ruler and compass.
For an angle of an integer number of degrees, the sine and the cosine may be expressed in terms of square roots and the
cube root of a non-real
complex number.
Galois theory allows a proof that, if the angle is not a multiple of 3°, non-real cube roots are unavoidable.
For an angle which, expressed in degrees, is not a rational number, then either the angle or both the sine and the cosine are
transcendental numbers. This is a corollary of
Baker's theorem, proved in 1966.
The sine function (blue) is closely approximated by its
Taylor polynomial of degree 7 (pink) for a full cycle centered on the origin.
Animation for the approximation of cosine via Taylor polynomials.
together with the first Taylor polynomials
The modern trend in mathematics is to build
geometry from
calculus rather than the converse.[citation needed] Therefore, except at a very elementary level, trigonometric functions are defined using the methods of calculus.
Trigonometric functions are
differentiable and
analytic at every point where they are defined; that is, everywhere for the sine and the cosine, and, for the tangent, everywhere except at π/2 + kπ for every integer k.
The trigonometric function are
periodic functions, and their
primitive period is 2π for the sine and the cosine, and π for the tangent, which is
increasing in each
open interval(π/2 + kπ, π/2 + (k + 1)π). At each end point of these intervals, the tangent function has a vertical
asymptote.
In calculus, there are two equivalent definitions of trigonometric functions, either using
power series or
differential equations. These definitions are equivalent, as starting from one of them, it is easy to retrieve the other as a property. However the definition through differential equations is somehow more natural, since, for example, the choice of the coefficients of the power series may appear as quite arbitrary, and the Pythagorean identity is much easier to deduce from the differential equations.
Applying the
quotient rule to the tangent , we derive
Power series expansion
Applying the differential equations to
power series with indeterminate coefficients, one may deduce
recurrence relations for the coefficients of the
Taylor series of the sine and cosine functions. These recurrence relations are easy to solve, and give the series expansions[12]
Being defined as fractions of entire functions, the other trigonometric functions may be extended to
meromorphic functions, that is functions that are holomorphic in the whole complex plane, except some isolated points called
poles. Here, the poles are the numbers of the form for the tangent and the secant, or for the cotangent and the cosecant, where k is an arbitrary integer.
This formula is commonly considered for real values of x, but it remains true for all complex values.
Proof: Let and One has for j = 1, 2. The
quotient rule implies thus that . Therefore, is a constant function, which equals 1, as This proves the formula.
One has
Solving this
linear system in sine and cosine, one can express them in terms of the exponential function:
When x is real, this may be rewritten as
Most
trigonometric identities can be proved by expressing trigonometric functions in terms of the complex exponential function by using above formulas, and then using the identity for simplifying the result.
Definitions using functional equations
One can also define the trigonometric functions using various
functional equations.
For example,[18] the sine and the cosine form the unique pair of
continuous functions that satisfy the difference formula
By taking advantage of
domain coloring, it is possible to graph the trigonometric functions as complex-valued functions. Various features unique to the complex functions can be seen from the graph; for example, the sine and cosine functions can be seen to be unbounded as the imaginary part of becomes larger (since the color white represents infinity), and the fact that the functions contain simple
zeros or poles is apparent from the fact that the hue cycles around each zero or pole exactly once. Comparing these graphs with those of the corresponding Hyperbolic functions highlights the relationships between the two.
Trigonometric functions in the complex plane
Basic identities
Many
identities interrelate the trigonometric functions. This section contains the most basic ones; for more identities, see
List of trigonometric identities. These identities may be proved geometrically from the unit-circle definitions or the right-angled-triangle definitions (although, for the latter definitions, care must be taken for angles that are not in the interval [0, π/2], see
Proofs of trigonometric identities). For non-geometrical proofs using only tools of
calculus, one may use directly the differential equations, in a way that is similar to that of the
above proof of Euler's identity. One can also use Euler's identity for expressing all trigonometric functions in terms of complex exponentials and using properties of the exponential function.
All trigonometric functions are
periodic functions of period 2π. This is the smallest period, except for the tangent and the cotangent, which have π as smallest period. This means that, for every integer k, one has
Pythagorean identity
The Pythagorean identity, is the expression of the
Pythagorean theorem in terms of trigonometric functions. It is
.
Dividing through by either or gives
and
.
Sum and difference formulas
The sum and difference formulas allow expanding the sine, the cosine, and the tangent of a sum or a difference of two angles in terms of sines and cosines and tangents of the angles themselves. These can be derived geometrically, using arguments that date to
Ptolemy. One can also produce them algebraically using
Euler's formula.
Sum
Difference
When the two angles are equal, the sum formulas reduce to simpler equations known as the
double-angle formulae.
The
derivatives of trigonometric functions result from those of sine and cosine by applying
quotient rule. The values given for the
antiderivatives in the following table can be verified by differentiating them. The number C is a
constant of integration.
Note: For the integral of can also be written as and for the integral of for as where is the
inverse hyperbolic sine.
Alternatively, the derivatives of the 'co-functions' can be obtained using trigonometric identities and the chain rule:
The trigonometric functions are periodic, and hence not
injective, so strictly speaking, they do not have an
inverse function. However, on each interval on which a trigonometric function is
monotonic, one can define an inverse function, and this defines inverse trigonometric functions as
multivalued functions. To define a true inverse function, one must restrict the domain to an interval where the function is monotonic, and is thus
bijective from this interval to its image by the function. The common choice for this interval, called the set of
principal values, is given in the following table. As usual, the inverse trigonometric functions are denoted with the prefix "arc" before the name or its abbreviation of the function.
Function
Definition
Domain
Set of principal values
The notations sin−1, cos−1, etc. are often used for arcsin and arccos, etc. When this notation is used, inverse functions could be confused with multiplicative inverses. The notation with the "arc" prefix avoids such a confusion, though "arcsec" for arcsecant can be confused with "
arcsecond".
Just like the sine and cosine, the inverse trigonometric functions can also be expressed in terms of infinite series. They can also be expressed in terms of
complex logarithms.
In this section A, B, C denote the three (interior) angles of a triangle, and a, b, c denote the lengths of the respective opposite edges. They are related by various formulas, which are named by the trigonometric functions they involve.
It can be proved by dividing the triangle into two right ones and using the above definition of sine. The law of sines is useful for computing the lengths of the unknown sides in a triangle if two angles and one side are known. This is a common situation occurring in triangulation, a technique to determine unknown distances by measuring two angles and an accessible enclosed distance.
The law of cosines (also known as the cosine formula or cosine rule) is an extension of the
Pythagorean theorem:
or equivalently,
In this formula the angle at C is opposite to the side c. This theorem can be proved by dividing the triangle into two right ones and using the
Pythagorean theorem.
The law of cosines can be used to determine a side of a triangle if two sides and the angle between them are known. It can also be used to find the cosines of an angle (and consequently the angles themselves) if the lengths of all the sides are known.
If s is the triangle's semiperimeter, (a + b + c)/2, and r is the radius of the triangle's
incircle, then rs is the triangle's area. Therefore
Heron's formula implies that:
Sinusoidal basis functions (bottom) can form a sawtooth wave (top) when added. All the basis functions have nodes at the nodes of the sawtooth, and all but the fundamental (k = 1) have additional nodes. The oscillation seen about the sawtooth when k is large is called the
Gibbs phenomenon
The trigonometric functions are also important in physics. The sine and the cosine functions, for example, are used to describe
simple harmonic motion, which models many natural phenomena, such as the movement of a mass attached to a spring and, for small angles, the pendular motion of a mass hanging by a string. The sine and cosine functions are one-dimensional projections of
uniform circular motion.
Trigonometric functions also prove to be useful in the study of general
periodic functions. The characteristic wave patterns of periodic functions are useful for modeling recurring phenomena such as sound or light
waves.[20]
Under rather general conditions, a periodic function f (x) can be expressed as a sum of sine waves or cosine waves in a
Fourier series.[21] Denoting the sine or cosine
basis functions by φk, the expansion of the periodic function f (t) takes the form:
In the animation of a square wave at top right it can be seen that just a few terms already produce a fairly good approximation. The superposition of several terms in the expansion of a
sawtooth wave are shown underneath.
All six trigonometric functions in current use were known in
Islamic mathematics by the 9th century, as was the
law of sines, used in
solving triangles.[23] With the exception of the sine (which was adopted from Indian mathematics), the other five modern trigonometric functions were discovered by Persian and Arab mathematicians, including the cosine, tangent, cotangent, secant and cosecant.[23]Al-Khwārizmī (c. 780–850) produced tables of sines, cosines and tangents. Circa 830,
Habash al-Hasib al-Marwazi discovered the cotangent, and produced tables of tangents and cotangents.[24][25]Muhammad ibn Jābir al-Harrānī al-Battānī (853–929) discovered the reciprocal functions of secant and cosecant, and produced the first table of cosecants for each degree from 1° to 90°.[25] The trigonometric functions were later studied by mathematicians including
Omar Khayyám,
Bhāskara II,
Nasir al-Din al-Tusi,
Jamshīd al-Kāshī (14th century),
Ulugh Beg (14th century),
Regiomontanus (1464),
Rheticus, and Rheticus' student
Valentinus Otho.
The tangent function was brought to Europe by
Giovanni Bianchini in 1467 in trigonometry tables he created to support the calculation of stellar coordinates.[27]
The terms tangent and secant were first introduced by the Danish mathematician
Thomas Fincke in his book Geometria rotundi (1583).[28]
The 17th century French mathematician
Albert Girard made the first published use of the abbreviations sin, cos, and tan in his book Trigonométrie.[29]
The word sine derives[32] from
Latinsinus, meaning "bend; bay", and more specifically "the hanging fold of the upper part of a
toga", "the bosom of a garment", which was chosen as the translation of what was interpreted as the Arabic word jaib, meaning "pocket" or "fold" in the twelfth-century translations of works by
Al-Battani and
al-Khwārizmī into
Medieval Latin.[33]
The choice was based on a misreading of the Arabic written form j-y-b (جيب), which itself originated as a
transliteration from Sanskrit jīvā, which along with its synonym jyā (the standard Sanskrit term for the sine) translates to "bowstring", being in turn adopted from
Ancient Greekχορδή "string".[34]
The word tangent comes from Latin tangens meaning "touching", since the line touches the circle of unit radius, whereas secant stems from Latin secans—"cutting"—since the line cuts the circle.[35]
The prefix "
co-" (in "cosine", "cotangent", "cosecant") is found in
Edmund Gunter's Canon triangulorum (1620), which defines the cosinus as an abbreviation for the sinus complementi (sine of the
complementary angle) and proceeds to define the cotangens similarly.[36][37]
See also
All Students Take Calculus – a mnemonic for recalling the signs of trigonometric functions in a particular quadrant of a Cartesian plane
Versine – for several less used trigonometric functions
Notes
^Klein, Christian Felix (1924) [1902]. Elementarmathematik vom höheren Standpunkt aus: Arithmetik, Algebra, Analysis (in German). Vol. 1 (3rd ed.). Berlin:
J. Springer.
^Bityutskov, V.I. (2011-02-07).
"Trigonometric Functions". Encyclopedia of Mathematics.
Archived from the original on 2017-12-29. Retrieved 2017-12-29.
^Lambert, Johann Heinrich (2004) [1768], "Mémoire sur quelques propriétés remarquables des quantités transcendantes circulaires et logarithmiques", in Berggren, Lennart;
Borwein, Jonathan M.;
Borwein, Peter B. (eds.), Pi, a source book (3rd ed.), New York:
Springer-Verlag, pp. 129–140,
ISBN0-387-20571-3
^Kannappan, Palaniappan (2009). Functional Equations and Inequalities with Applications. Springer.
ISBN978-0387894911.
^The Universal Encyclopaedia of Mathematics, Pan Reference Books, 1976, pp. 529–530. English version George Allen and Unwin, 1964. Translated from the German version Meyers Rechenduden, 1960.
^See for example, Folland, Gerald B. (2009).
"Convergence and completeness". Fourier Analysis and its Applications (Reprint of Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole 1992 ed.). American Mathematical Society. pp. 77ff.
ISBN978-0-8218-4790-9.
Archived from the original on 2015-03-19.
^
abcBoyer, Carl B. (1991). A History of Mathematics (Second ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
ISBN0-471-54397-7, p. 210.
^O'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F.
"Madhava of Sangamagrama". School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland. Archived from
the original on 2006-05-14. Retrieved 2007-09-08.
See Merlet,
A Note on the History of the Trigonometric Functions in Ceccarelli (ed.), International Symposium on History of Machines and Mechanisms, Springer, 2004 See Maor (1998), chapter 3, for an earlier etymology crediting Gerard. See Katx, Victor (July 2008). A history of mathematics (3rd ed.). Boston:
Pearson. p. 210 (sidebar).
ISBN978-0321387004.
^See Plofker, Mathematics in India, Princeton University Press, 2009, p. 257 See
"Clark University".
Archived from the original on 2008-06-15. See Maor (1998), chapter 3, regarding the etymology.
Lars Ahlfors, Complex Analysis: an introduction to the theory of analytic functions of one complex variable, second edition,
McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 1966.
Gal, Shmuel and Bachelis, Boris. An accurate elementary mathematical library for the IEEE floating point standard, ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software (1991).
Joseph, George G., The Crest of the Peacock: Non-European Roots of Mathematics, 2nd ed.
Penguin Books, London. (2000).
ISBN0-691-00659-8.
Kantabutra, Vitit, "On hardware for computing exponential and trigonometric functions," IEEE Trans. Computers45 (3), 328–339 (1996).