- May 22, 2004
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We're working on Trigonometric Identities and Equations, and I pretty much have it down, but one problem has me stumped.
Directions: Prove the equation is an identity.
csc^6 x - cot^6 = 1 + 3 csc^2x * cot^2 x
At first I thought it might have something to do with x^3 - a^3 = (x - a) (x^2 + ax + a^2):
(csc^2 x)^3 - (cot^2 x)^3 = (csc^2 x - cot^2 x) (csc^4 x + csc^2 x * cot^2 + cot^4)
(csc^2 x - cot^2 x) turns into 1, but then I'm stuck with (csc^4 x + csc^2 x * cot^2 + cot^4).
Am I on the right track? Could anyone help me get started in the right direction?
Directions: Prove the equation is an identity.
csc^6 x - cot^6 = 1 + 3 csc^2x * cot^2 x
At first I thought it might have something to do with x^3 - a^3 = (x - a) (x^2 + ax + a^2):
(csc^2 x)^3 - (cot^2 x)^3 = (csc^2 x - cot^2 x) (csc^4 x + csc^2 x * cot^2 + cot^4)
(csc^2 x - cot^2 x) turns into 1, but then I'm stuck with (csc^4 x + csc^2 x * cot^2 + cot^4).
Am I on the right track? Could anyone help me get started in the right direction?
