Came across this on a website which has challenging questions for HS students. How to solve this system of equations:sinx + siny = 1.4cosx + cosy = 1.2I know it can't be that difficult because it is a high school level problem and doesnt involve calc in the solution, but haven't done trig for a while, and so can't seem to solve it.I tried 2 different approaches and got stuck on both:Method 1:siny = ....cosy = ....Square both sides of each equation, and add them together, expand the squares, and simplify to get:2.8sinx + 2.4cosx = 3.4How to solve that?Method 2:Solve both equations for y (or for x), and then equate:arcsin(1.4 - sinx) = arccos(1.2 - cosx)And then what?! I tried taking sin (or cos) of both sides, but then don't know how to proceed further.
1/21/2014 3:04:23 PM
1/21/2014 3:38:20 PM
This is the correct section for it, I made a mistake posting it in study hall. This is "fun stuff" for me. It is *not* a test or a homework or related stuff. It is like posting a puzzle. I have asked for the other thread to be deleted.
1/21/2014 3:44:28 PM
There are a set of sum/difference relationships that are useful. This one should do the trick:(sinX + sinY)/(cosX+cosY) = tan(1/2*(X+Y))The numeric values can be substituted like so:1.4/1.2 = tan(1/2(X+Y))Which suggests 1/2(X+Y) = 49.4 degrees and X = 99 degrees - YThis can be substituted back into the original equation, which I will finish later.
1/21/2014 5:28:45 PM
Hmmm... It didn't make a quick solution. I'll take a hack later.
1/21/2014 5:46:57 PM
Hey thanks for attempting.The website gave a tip on how to proceed, and that's what I have done in method 2. But I don't know what to do after that. Actually the website said the question is a past IB Math exam question, and the question actually said to solve both equations for y and equate for solving. So perhaps that's the easiest/quickest way to solve.
1/21/2014 6:15:01 PM
I followed the arcsin(1.4-sinx) = arccos(1.2-sinx) method for a ways. I took the sin of both sides, canceling the arcsin and opening up that paren. Moved the 1.4 over, took the arcsin of both sides, giving-x = arccos(1.2 - sinx) - arcsin(1.4)From here, similar manuevers for the other side result in:sin(x) - cos(x) = 1.2 - cos(arcsin(1.4))This is numerically solveable (I used Wolframalpha, my other method would have been graphing) but I don't see an easy analytic solution for sin(x) - cos(x)
1/21/2014 8:22:25 PM
It relies on the circular identity cos^2(x)+sin^2(x)=1 and the sum-to-product and product-to-sum identities, like cos(a+b)=cos(a)cos(b)-sin(a)sin(b) and cos(a)+cos(b)=2cos((a+b)/2)cos((a-b)/2):
sin(x)+sin(y)=7/5cos(x)+cos(y)=6/5
sin^2(x)+2sin(x)sin(y)+sin^2(y)=49/25cos^2(x)+2cos(x)cos(y)+cos^2(y)=36/25
cos^2(x)+sin^2(x)+2cos(x)cos(y)+2sin(x)sin(y)+cos^2(y)+sin^2(y)=85/25cos^2(x)-sin^2(x)+2cos(x)cos(y)-2sin(x)sin(y)+cos^2(y)-sin^2(y)=-13/25
1+2cos(x-y)+1=17/5cos(2x)+2cos(x+y)+cos(2y)=-13/25
cos(x-y)=7/102cos(x+y)+2cos(x+y)cos(x-y)=-13/25
cos(x+y)+cos(x+y)*7/10=-13/50, so (17/10)cos(x+y)=-13/50, so cos(x+y)=-13/85
x-y=±arccos(7/10)x+y=±(pi-arccos(13/85))
1/22/2014 11:59:42 AM
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=sinx+%2B+siny+%3D+1.4%2C+cosx+%2B+cosy+%3D+1.2if you want to see it graphed as well
1/22/2014 3:12:40 PM