The Other Trigonometric Functions

In this section, you will:

A wheelchair ramp that meets the standards of the Americans with Disabilities Act must make an angle with the ground whose tangent is 1 12

or less, regardless of its length. A tangent represents a ratio, so this means that for every 1 inch of rise, the ramp must have 12 inches of run. Trigonometric functions allow us to specify the shapes and proportions of objects independent of exact dimensions. We have already defined the sine and cosine functions of an angle. Though sine and cosine are the trigonometric functions most often used, there are four others. Together they make up the set of six trigonometric functions. In this section, we will investigate the remaining functions.

Finding Exact Values of the Trigonometric Functions Secant, Cosecant, Tangent, and Cotangent

To define the remaining functions, we will once again draw a unit circle with a point ( x,y )

corresponding to an angle of t,

as shown in [link]. As with the sine and cosine, we can use the ( x,y )

coordinates to find the other functions.

Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (x, y) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.

The first function we will define is the tangent. The tangent of an angle is the ratio of the y-value to the x-value of the corresponding point on the unit circle. In [link], the tangent of angle t

is equal to y x ,x≠0.

Because the y-value is equal to the sine of t,

and the x-value is equal to the cosine of t,

the tangent of angle t

can also be defined as sint cost ,cost0.

The tangent function is abbreviated as tan.

The remaining three functions can all be expressed as reciprocals of functions we have already defined.

Tangent, Secant, Cosecant, and Cotangent Functions

If t

is a real number and (x,y)

is a point where the terminal side of an angle of t

radians intercepts the unit circle, then

tant= y x ,x0 sect= 1 x ,x0 csct= 1 y ,y0 cott= x y ,y0
Finding Trigonometric Functions from a Point on the Unit Circle

The point ( 3 2 , 1 2 )

is on the unit circle, as shown in [link]. Find sint,cost,tant,sect,csct,

and cott.

Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (negative square root of 3 over 2, 1/2) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.

Because we know the (x,y)

coordinates of the point on the unit circle indicated by angle t,

we can use those coordinates to find the six functions:

sint=y= 1 2 cost=x= 3 2 tant= y x = 1 2 3 2 = 1 2 ( 2 3 )= 1 3 = 3 3 sect= 1 x = 1 3 2 = 2 3 = 2 3 3 csct= 1 y = 1 1 2 =2 cott= x y = 3 2 1 2 = 3 2 ( 2 1 )= 3

The point ( 2 2 , 2 2 )

is on the unit circle, as shown in [link]. Find sint,cost,tant,sect,csct,

and cott.

Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (square root of 2 over 2, negative square root of 2 over 2) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.

sint= 2 2 ,cost= 2 2 ,tant=1,sect= 2 ,csct= 2 ,cott=1
Finding the Trigonometric Functions of an Angle

Find sint,cost,tant,sect,csct,

and cott

when t= π 6 .

We have previously used the properties of equilateral triangles to demonstrate that sin π 6 = 1 2

and cos π 6 = 3 2 .

We can use these values and the definitions of tangent, secant, cosecant, and cotangent as functions of sine and cosine to find the remaining function values.* * *

tan  π 6 = sin  π 6 cos  π 6 = 1 2 3 2 = 1 3 = 3 3
sec π 6 = 1 cos π 6 = 1 3 2 = 2 3 = 2 3 3
csc π 6 = 1 sin π 6 = 1 1 2 =2
cot π 6 = cos π 6 sin π 6 = 3 2 1 2 = 3

Find sint,cost,tant,sect,csct,

and cott

when t= π 3 .

sin π 3 = 3 2 cos π 3 = 1 2 tan π 3 = 3 sec π 3 =2 csc π 3 = 2 3 3 cot π 3 = 3 3

Because we know the sine and cosine values for the common first-quadrant angles, we can find the other function values for those angles as well by setting x

equal to the cosine and y

equal to the sine and then using the definitions of tangent, secant, cosecant, and cotangent. The results are shown in [link].

| Angle | 0 | π 6 , or 30° | π 4 , or 45° | π 3 , or 60° | π 2 , or 90° | | Cosine | 1 | 3 2

2 2
1 2
0    
Sine 0 1 2
2 2
3 2
1    
Tangent 0 3 3
1 3
Undefined    
Secant 1 2 3 3
2
2 Undefined    
Cosecant Undefined 2 2
2 3 3
1    
Cotangent Undefined 3
1 3 3
0

Using Reference Angles to Evaluate Tangent, Secant, Cosecant, and Cotangent

We can evaluate trigonometric functions of angles outside the first quadrant using reference angles as we have already done with the sine and cosine functions. The procedure is the same: Find the reference angle formed by the terminal side of the given angle with the horizontal axis. The trigonometric function values for the original angle will be the same as those for the reference angle, except for the positive or negative sign, which is determined by x- and y-values in the original quadrant. [link] shows which functions are positive in which quadrant.

To help us remember which of the six trigonometric functions are positive in each quadrant, we can use the mnemonic phrase “A Smart Trig Class.” Each of the four words in the phrase corresponds to one of the four quadrants, starting with quadrant I and rotating counterclockwise. In quadrant I, which is “A,” all of the six trigonometric functions are positive. In quadrant II, “Smart,” only sine and its reciprocal function, cosecant, are positive. In quadrant III, “Trig,” only tangent and its reciprocal function, cotangent, are positive. Finally, in quadrant IV, “Class,” only cosine and its reciprocal function, secant, are positive.

Graph of circle with each quadrant labeled. Under quadrant 1, labels fro sin t, cos t, tan t, sec t, csc t, and cot t. Under quadrant 2, labels for sin t and csc t. Under quadrant 3, labels for tan t and cot t. Under quadrant 4, labels for cos t, sec t.

Given an angle not in the first quadrant, use reference angles to find all six trigonometric functions.

  1. Measure the angle formed by the terminal side of the given angle and the horizontal axis. This is the reference angle.
  2. Evaluate the function at the reference angle.
  3. Observe the quadrant where the terminal side of the original angle is located. Based on the quadrant, determine whether the output is positive or negative.
Using Reference Angles to Find Trigonometric Functions

Use reference angles to find all six trigonometric functions of 5π 6 .

The angle between this angle’s terminal side and the x-axis is π 6 ,

so that is the reference angle. Since 5π 6

is in the third quadrant, where both x

and y

are negative, cosine, sine, secant, and cosecant will be negative, while tangent and cotangent will be positive.

cos( 5π 6 )= 3 2 ,sin( 5π 6 )= 1 2 ,tan( 5π 6 )= 3 3 sec( 5π 6 )= 2 3 3 ,csc( 5π 6 )=2,cot( 5π 6 )= 3

Use reference angles to find all six trigonometric functions of 7π 4 .

sin( 7π 4 )= 2 2 ,cos( 7π 4 )= 2 2 ,tan( 7π 4 )=1,
sec( 7π 4 )= 2 ,csc( 7π 4 )= 2 ,cot( 7π 4 )=1

Using Even and Odd Trigonometric Functions

To be able to use our six trigonometric functions freely with both positive and negative angle inputs, we should examine how each function treats a negative input. As it turns out, there is an important difference among the functions in this regard.

Consider the function f(x)= x 2 ,

shown in [link]. The graph of the function is symmetrical about the y-axis. All along the curve, any two points with opposite x-values have the same function value. This matches the result of calculation: (4) 2 = (−4) 2 ,

(−5) 2 = (5) 2 ,

and so on. So f(x)= x 2

is an even function, a function such that two inputs that are opposites have the same output. That means f( x )=f( x ).

Graph of parabola with points (-2, 4) and (2, 4) labeled.

Now consider the function f(x)= x 3 ,

shown in [link]. The graph is not symmetrical about the y-axis. All along the graph, any two points with opposite x-values also have opposite y-values. So f(x)= x 3

is an odd function, one such that two inputs that are opposites have outputs that are also opposites. That means f( x )=f( x ).

Graph of function with labels for points (-1, -1) and (1, 1).

We can test whether a trigonometric function is even or odd by drawing a unit circle with a positive and a negative angle, as in [link]. The sine of the positive angle is y.

The sine of the negative angle is −y. The sine function, then, is an odd function. We can test each of the six trigonometric functions in this fashion. The results are shown in [link].

Graph of circle with angle of t and -t inscribed. Point of (x, y) is at intersection of terminal side of angle t and edge of circle. Point of (x, -y) is at intersection of terminal side of angle -t and edge of circle.

sint=y sin(t)=y sintsin(t)
cost=x cos(t)=x cost=cos(t)
tan(t)= y x tan(t)= y x tanttan(t)
 
sect= 1 x sec(t)= 1 x sect=sec(t)
csct= 1 y csc(t)= 1 y csctcsc(t)
cott= x y cot(t)= x y cottcot(t)
Even and Odd Trigonometric Functions

An even function is one in which f(x)=f(x).

An odd function is one in which f(x)=f(x).

Cosine and secant are even:

cos(t)=cost sec(t)=sect

Sine, tangent, cosecant, and cotangent are odd:

sin(t)=sint tan(t)=tant csc(t)=csct cot(t)=cott
Using Even and Odd Properties of Trigonometric Functions

If the secant of angle t

is 2, what is the secant of t?

Secant is an even function. The secant of an angle is the same as the secant of its opposite. So if the secant of angle t is 2, the secant of t

is also 2.

If the cotangent of angle t

is 3 ,

what is the cotangent of t?

3

Recognizing and Using Fundamental Identities

We have explored a number of properties of trigonometric functions. Now, we can take the relationships a step further, and derive some fundamental identities. Identities are statements that are true for all values of the input on which they are defined. Usually, identities can be derived from definitions and relationships we already know. For example, the Pythagorean Identity we learned earlier was derived from the Pythagorean Theorem and the definitions of sine and cosine.

Fundamental Identities

We can derive some useful identities from the six trigonometric functions. The other four trigonometric functions can be related back to the sine and cosine functions using these basic relationships:

tant= sintcos t
sect= 1 cost
csct= 1 sint
cott= 1 tant = cost sint
Using Identities to Evaluate Trigonometric Functions
  1. Given sin(45°)= 2 2 ,cos(45°)= 2 2 ,

    evaluate

    tan(45°).
  2. Given sin( 5π 6 )= 1 2 ,cos( 5π 6 )= 3 2 ,evaluatesec( 5π 6 ).

Because we know the sine and cosine values for these angles, we can use identities to evaluate the other functions.

  1. tan(45°)= sin(45°) cos(45°) = 2 2 2 2 =1
  2. sec( 5π 6 )= 1 cos( 5π 6 ) = 1 3 2 = 2 3 = 2 3 3

Evaluate csc( 7π 6 ).

2
Using Identities to Simplify Trigonometric Expressions

Simplify sect tant .

We can simplify this by rewriting both functions in terms of sine and cosine.

sect tant = 1 cost sint cost To divide the functions, we multiply by the reciprocal. = 1 cost cost sint Divide out the cosines. = 1 sint Simplify and use the identity. =csct

By showing that sect tant

can be simplified to csct,

we have, in fact, established a new identity.

sect tant =csct

Simplify (tant)(cost).

sint

Alternate Forms of the Pythagorean Identity

We can use these fundamental identities to derive alternative forms of the Pythagorean Identity, cos 2 t+ sin 2 t=1.

One form is obtained by dividing both sides by cos 2 t:

cos 2 t cos 2 t + sin 2 t cos 2 t = 1 cos 2 t 1+ tan 2 t= sec 2 t

The other form is obtained by dividing both sides by sin 2 t:

cos 2 t sin 2 t + sin 2 t sin 2 t = 1 sin 2 t cot 2 t+1= csc 2 t
Alternate Forms of the Pythagorean Identity
1+ tan 2 t= sec 2 t
cot 2 t+1= csc 2 t
Using Identities to Relate Trigonometric Functions

If cos(t)= 12 13

and t

is in quadrant IV, as shown in [link], find the values of the other five trigonometric functions.

Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (12/13, y) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.

We can find the sine using the Pythagorean Identity, cos 2 t+ sin 2 t=1,

and the remaining functions by relating them to sine and cosine.

( 12 13 ) 2 + sin 2 t=1               sin 2 t=1 ( 12 13 ) 2               sin 2 t=1 144 169               sin 2 t= 25 169                sint=± 25 169                sint=± 25 169                sint=± 5 13

The sign of the sine depends on the y-values in the quadrant where the angle is located. Since the angle is in quadrant IV, where the y-values are negative, its sine is negative, 5 13 .

The remaining functions can be calculated using identities relating them to sine and cosine.

tant= sint cost = 5 13 12 13 = 5 12 sect= 1 cost = 1 12 13 = 13 12 csct= 1 sint = 1 5 13 = 13 5 cott= 1 tant = 1 5 12 = 12 5

If sec(t)= 17 8

and 0<t<π,

find the values of the other five functions.

cost= 8 17 ,sint= 15 17 ,tant= 15 8
csct= 17 15 ,cott= 8 15

As we discussed in the chapter opening, a function that repeats its values in regular intervals is known as a periodic function. The trigonometric functions are periodic. For the four trigonometric functions, sine, cosine, cosecant and secant, a revolution of one circle, or 2π,

will result in the same outputs for these functions. And for tangent and cotangent, only a half a revolution will result in the same outputs.

Other functions can also be periodic. For example, the lengths of months repeat every four years. If x

represents the length time, measured in years, and f(x)

represents the number of days in February, then f(x+4)=f(x).

This pattern repeats over and over through time. In other words, every four years, February is guaranteed to have the same number of days as it did 4 years earlier. The positive number 4 is the smallest positive number that satisfies this condition and is called the period. A period is the shortest interval over which a function completes one full cycle—in this example, the period is 4 and represents the time it takes for us to be certain February has the same number of days.

Period of a Function

The period P

of a repeating function f

is the number representing the interval such that f(x+P)=f(x)

for any value of x.

The period of the cosine, sine, secant, and cosecant functions is 2π.

The period of the tangent and cotangent functions is π.

Finding the Values of Trigonometric Functions

Find the values of the six trigonometric functions of angle t

based on [link].

Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (1/2, negative square root of 3 over 2) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.

sint=y= 3 2 cost=x= 1 2 tant= sint cost = 3 2 1 2 = 3 sect= 1 cost = 1 1 2 =2 csct= 1 sint = 1 3 2 = 2 3 3 cott= 1 tant = 1 3 = 3 3

Find the values of the six trigonometric functions of angle t

based on [link].

Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (0, -1) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.

sint=1,cost=0,tant=Undefined sect= Undefined,csct=1,cott=0
Finding the Value of Trigonometric Functions

If sin( t )= 3 2

and cos(t)= 1 2 ,

find sec(t),csc(t),tan(t), cot(t).

sect= 1 cost = 1 1 2 =2 csct= 1 sint = 1 3 2 2 3 3 tant= sint cost = 3 2 1 2 = 3 cott= 1 tant = 1 3 = 3 3

If sin( t )= 2 2

and cos( t )= 2 2 ,

find sec(t),csc(t),tan(t), and cot(t).

sect= 2 ,csct= 2 ,tant=1,cott=1

Evaluating Trigonometric Functions with a Calculator

We have learned how to evaluate the six trigonometric functions for the common first-quadrant angles and to use them as reference angles for angles in other quadrants. To evaluate trigonometric functions of other angles, we use a scientific or graphing calculator or computer software. If the calculator has a degree mode and a radian mode, confirm the correct mode is chosen before making a calculation.

Evaluating a tangent function with a scientific calculator as opposed to a graphing calculator or computer algebra system is like evaluating a sine or cosine: Enter the value and press the TAN key. For the reciprocal functions, there may not be any dedicated keys that say CSC, SEC, or COT. In that case, the function must be evaluated as the reciprocal of a sine, cosine, or tangent.

If we need to work with degrees and our calculator or software does not have a degree mode, we can enter the degrees multiplied by the conversion factor π 180

to convert the degrees to radians. To find the secant of 30°,

we could press

(for a scientific calculator): 1 30× π 180 COS

or

(for a graphing calculator): 1 cos( 30π 180 )

Given an angle measure in radians, use a scientific calculator to find the cosecant.

  1. If the calculator has degree mode and radian mode, set it to radian mode.
  2. Enter: 1 /
  3. Enter the value of the angle inside parentheses.
  4. Press the SIN key.
  5. Press the = key.

Given an angle measure in radians, use a graphing utility/calculator to find the cosecant.

  1. If the graphing utility has degree mode and radian mode, set it to radian mode.
  2. Enter: 1 /
  3. Press the SIN key.
  4. Enter the value of the angle inside parentheses.
  5. Press the ENTER key.
Evaluating the Cosecant Using Technology

Evaluate the cosecant of 5π 7 .

For a scientific calculator, enter information as follows:

1 / ( 5 × π / 7 ) SIN =
csc( 5π 7 )1.279

Evaluate the cotangent of π 8 .

2.414

Access these online resources for additional instruction and practice with other trigonometric functions.

Key Equations

Tangent function tant= sint cost
   
Secant function sect= 1 cost
   
Cosecant function csct= 1 sint
   
Cotangent function cott= 1 tant = cost sint

Key Concepts

Section Exercises

Verbal

On an interval of [ 0,2π ),

can the sine and cosine values of a radian measure ever be equal? If so, where?

Yes, when the reference angle is π 4

and the terminal side of the angle is in quadrants I and III. Thus, at x= π 4 , 5π 4 ,

the sine and cosine values are equal.

What would you estimate the cosine of π

degrees to be? Explain your reasoning.

For any angle in quadrant II, if you knew the sine of the angle, how could you determine the cosine of the angle?

Substitute the sine of the angle in for y

in the Pythagorean Theorem x 2 + y 2 =1.

Solve for x

and take the negative solution.

Describe the secant function.

Tangent and cotangent have a period of π.

What does this tell us about the output of these functions?

The outputs of tangent and cotangent will repeat every π

units.

Algebraic

For the following exercises, find the exact value of each expression.

tan π 6
sec π 6
2 3 3
csc π 6
cot π 6
3
tan π 4
sec π 4
2
csc π 4
cot π 4

1

tan π 3
sec π 3

2

csc π 3
cot π 3
3 3

For the following exercises, use reference angles to evaluate the expression.

tan 5π 6
sec 7π 6
2 3 3
csc 11π 6
cot 13π 6
3
tan 7π 4
sec 3π 4
2
csc 5π 4
cot 11π 4

−1

tan 8π 3
sec 4π 3

−2

csc 2π 3
cot 5π 3
3 3
tan225°
sec300°

2

csc150°
cot240°
3 3
tan330°
sec120°

−2

csc210°
cot315°

−1

If sint= 3 4 ,

and t

is in quadrant II, find cost,sect,csct,tant,cott.

If cost= 1 3 ,

and t

is in quadrant III, find sint,sect,csct,tant,cott.

If sint= 2 2 3 ,sect=3,csct= 3 2 4 ,tant=2 2 ,cott= 2 4

If tant= 12 5 ,

and 0t< π 2 ,

find sint,cost,sect,csct,

and cott.

If sint= 3 2

and cost= 1 2 ,

find sect,csct,tant,

and cott.

sect=2,csct= 2 3 3 ,tant= 3 ,cott= 3 3

If sin40°0.643cos40°0.766sec40°,csc40°,tan40°,andcot40°.

If sint= 2 2 ,

what is the sin(t)?

2 2

If cost= 1 2 ,

what is the cos(t)?

If sect=3.1,

what is the sec(t)?

3.1

If csct=0.34,

what is the csc(t)?

If tant=1.4,

what is the tan(t)?

1.4

If cott=9.23,

what is the cot(t)?

Graphical

For the following exercises, use the angle in the unit circle to find the value of the each of the six trigonometric functions.

![Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (square root of 2 over 2, square root of 2 over 2) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.](/precalculus-book/resources/CNX_Precalc_Figure_05_03_201.jpg)
sint= 2 2 ,cost= 2 2 ,tant=1,cott=1,sect= 2 ,csct= 2
![Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (square root of 3 over 2, 1/2) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.](/precalculus-book/resources/CNX_Precalc_Figure_05_03_202.jpg)
![Graph of circle with angle of t inscribed. Point of (-1/2, negative square root of 3 over 2) is at intersection of terminal side of angle and edge of circle.](/precalculus-book/resources/CNX_Precalc_Figure_05_03_203.jpg)
sint= 3 2 ,cost= 1 2 ,tant= 3 ,cott= 3 3 ,sect=2,csct= 2 3 3

Technology

For the following exercises, use a graphing calculator to evaluate.

csc 5π 9
cot 4π 7

–0.228

sec π 10
tan 5π 8

–2.414

sec 3π 4
csc π 4

1.414

tan98°
cot33°

1.540

cot140°
sec310°

1.556

Extensions

For the following exercises, use identities to evaluate the expression.

If tan( t )2.7,

and sin( t )0.94,

find cos( t ).

If tan( t )1.3,

and cos( t )0.61,

find sin( t ).

sin( t )0.79

If csc( t )3.2,

and cos( t )0.95,

find tan( t ).

If cot( t )0.58,

and cos( t )0.5,

find csc( t ).

csct1.16

Determine whether the function f(x)=2sinxcosx

is even, odd, or neither.

Determine whether the function f(x)=3 sin 2 xcosx+secx

is even, odd, or neither.

even

Determine whether the function f(x)=sinx2 cos 2 x

is even, odd, or neither.

Determine whether the function f(x)= csc 2 x+secx

is even, odd, or neither.

even

For the following exercises, use identities to simplify the expression.

cscttant
sect csct
sint cost =tant

Real-World Applications

The amount of sunlight in a certain city can be modeled by the function h=15cos( 1 600 d ),

where h

represents the hours of sunlight, and d

is the day of the year. Use the equation to find how many hours of sunlight there are on February 10, the 42nd day of the year. State the period of the function.

The amount of sunlight in a certain city can be modeled by the function h=16cos( 1 500 d ),

where h

represents the hours of sunlight, and d

is the day of the year. Use the equation to find how many hours of sunlight there are on September 24, the 267th day of the year. State the period of the function.

13.77 hours, period: 1000π

The equation P=20sin( 2πt )+100

models the blood pressure, P,

where t

represents time in seconds. (a) Find the blood pressure after 15 seconds. (b) What are the maximum and minimum blood pressures?

The height of a piston, h,

in inches, can be modeled by the equation y=2cosx+6,

where x

represents the crank angle. Find the height of the piston when the crank angle is 55°.

7.73 inches

The height of a piston, h,

in inches, can be modeled by the equation y=2cosx+5,

where x

represents the crank angle. Find the height of the piston when the crank angle is 55°.

Glossary

cosecant
the reciprocal of the sine function: on the unit circle, csct= 1 y ,y0
cotangent
the reciprocal of the tangent function: on the unit circle, cott= x y ,y0
identities
statements that are true for all values of the input on which they are defined
period
the smallest interval P

of a repeating function

f

such that

f(x+P)=f(x)
secant
the reciprocal of the cosine function: on the unit circle, sect= 1 x ,x0
tangent
the quotient of the sine and cosine: on the unit circle, tant= y x ,x0

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

You can also download for free at http://cnx.org/contents/fd53eae1-fa23-47c7-bb1b-972349835c3c@8.1

Attribution: