How do you find θ, if 0 < θ < 360 and cot theta =-1 and theta in in QIV?

1 Answer
Apr 24, 2018

theta = 315^circ

Explanation:

I've been doing trig homework all week and almost all the problems use multiples of 30^circ or 45^circ. This one is the latter.

Cotangent is reciprocal slope. It's pretty much the unit the Egyptians used to build the pyramids. They liked the seked , which was the number of palms horizontal per cubit vertical, a cubit being seven palms. Thus a seked is seven times the cotangent.

The line through the origin with reciprocal slope -1 is of course the line through the origin with the slope -1, namely y=-x. That's two rays, two angles, theta=-45^circ and -45+180=135^circ.

The former, theta=-45^circ is the one in the fourth quadrant.


Let's say we didn't know that and just needed to solve

cot theta = -1

The trick to all of these is to work them into the form cos x= cos a which has solutions x = pm a + 360^circ k, integer k. Linear combinations of cosines and sines are scaled and phase shifted cosines.

cos theta / sin theta = -1

cos theta = - sin theta

cos theta + sin theta = 0

Since cos 45^circ = sin 45^circ,

cos 45^circ cos theta + sin 45^circ sin theta = 0

cos(theta - 45^circ) = cos 90^circ

theta - 45^circ = \pm 90^circ + 360^circ k quad for integer k

theta = 45 \pm 90^circ + 360 ^ circ k

theta = -45^circ + 180^circ k

That's the same answer we got by knowing cotangent meant reciprocal slope, and we choose the one in the fourth quadrant as requested.

OK, we're asked for a positive value in the fourth quadrant which would be theta = -45^circ + 360^circ =315^circ