Prove that (cscx)/(1+cscx)-(cscx)/(1-cscx)=2sec^2x?

4 Answers
Apr 8, 2017

You need to know that csc x = 1/sin x, that sec x = 1/cos x, and the formula sin^2 x + cos^2 x =1

Explanation:

I assume you meant:
(csc x) / (1 + csc x) - (csc x) / (1 - csc x) = 2 sec^2 x

These cosecant (csc) everywhere are suspicious,
so let's change them since we know:
csc x = 1/sin x

Let's transform our left-hand-side of the equation:
(csc x) / (1 + csc x) - (csc x) / (1 - csc x)

Let's first put everything under the same denominator:
= ( csc x*(1-csc x) - csc x * (1+csc x ))/( (1+csc x) (1-csc x) )

and simplifying a bit, we get:
= ( csc x-csc^2 x - csc x - csc^2 x ) / (1 - csc^2 x)

so
= (-2csc^2 x)/(1-csc^2 x)

This then becomes
= (-2/sin^2 x)/(1-1/sin^2 x)

Again simplifying, we get:
= (-2/sin^2 x)/( (sin^2 x -1)/sin^2 x )

We cancel the 1/sin^2 x from the numerator and denominator and we get:
=-2/(sin^2x-1)

Remember that there is this wonderful formula sin^2 x + cos^2 x = 1. Then our expression becomes:
=-2/(sin^2x-sin^2 x-cos^2 x)
=2/cos^2 x
and since cos x = 1/sec x, we have

=2sec^2 x

which is exactly the right-hand-side of the equation.

Q.E.D.

Apr 8, 2017

Please see below.

Explanation:

cscx/(1+cscx)-cscx/(1-cscx)

=(1/sinx)/(1+1/sinx)-(1/sinx)/(1-1/sinx)

Multiplying each term by sinx we get

1/(sinx+1)-1/(sinx-1)

= 1/(1+sinx)+1/(1-sinx)

= (1-sinx+1+sinx)/(1-sin^2x)

= 2/cos^2x

= 2sec^2x

Apr 8, 2017

Proved in the explanation.

Explanation:

Prove: (csc(x)) / (1 + csc(x)) - (csc(x)) / (1 - csc(x)) = 2 sec^2(x)

Multiply the left side of the equation by 1 in the form, sin(x)/sin(x)

sin(x)/sin(x)((csc(x)) / (1 + csc(x)) - (csc(x)) / (1 - csc(x))) = 2 sec^2(x)

Please observe that, when the sine function is distributed, everywhere there was csc(x) becomes 1 and everywhere there was 1 becomes sin(x)

1 / (sin(x) + 1) - 1/ (sin(x) - 1) = 2 sec^2(x)

Multiply the first term by 1 in the form (sin(x) - 1)/(sin(x) - 1):

1 / (sin(x) + 1)(sin(x) - 1)/(sin(x) - 1) - 1/ (sin(x) - 1) = 2 sec^2(x)

This makes the denominator become the difference of two squares:

(sin(x) - 1)/(sin^2(x) - 1) - 1/ (sin(x) - 1) = 2 sec^2(x)

Multiply the second term by 1 in the form (sin(x) + 1)/(sin(x) + 1):

(sin(x) - 1)/(sin^2(x) - 1) - 1/ (sin(x) - 1)(sin(x) + 1)/(sin(x) + 1) = 2 sec^2(x)

This makes the denominator become the same difference of two squares:

(sin(x) - 1)/(sin^2(x) - 1) - (sin(x) + 1)/ (sin^2(x) - 1) = 2 sec^2(x)

Put both numerators over the common denominator:

(sin(x) - 1 - sin(x) - 1)/ (sin^2(x) - 1) = 2 sec^2(x)

Combine like terms:

-2/ (sin^2(x) - 1) = 2 sec^2(x)

Substitute -cos^2(x) for (sin^2(x) - 1):

-2/-cos^2(x) = 2 sec^2(x)

Because 1/cos(x) = sec(x), the left side becomes the same as the right:

2sec^2(x) = 2 sec^2(x)

Q.E.D.

Apr 8, 2017

Make a common denominator.

Explanation:

(csc x) / (1 + cscx) - (csc x)/(1-csc x) = 2 sec^2 x

Taking the left hand side & multiplying to get a common denominator,

((csc x)(1-csc x) - (csc x)(1+cscx)) / ((1+csc x)(1-cscx))

= (csc x - csc^2 x - csc x - csc^2 x) / (1 - csc x + csc x - csc^2 x)

= (-2 csc^2 x)/(1 - csc^2 x)

= -2/sin^2 x / 1 - 1/sin^2 x

( / is the divide symbol, easier to see when not in fraction form)

= -2/sin^2 x / (sin^x - 1)/sin^2 x

(Common denominator again by multiplying 1 by sin^2 x)

= -2/sin^2 x * sin^2x / (sin^2 x - 1)

(switch numerator & denominator and cancel out common terms)

= -2/(sin^2 x-1)

= -2/-cos^2 x

(sin^2 x + cos ^2 x = 1) Hence, sin^2 x - 1 = -cos^2 x

= 2/cos^2 x

= 2 sec^2 x