How do you find the domain and range of cos^-1 [sqrt (1/4 - x^2)]?

1 Answer
May 2, 2018

-1/2 le x le 1/2

pi/3 \le arccos(\sqrt{1/4-x^2}) le {pi}/2

Explanation:

The domain of the inverse cosine is [-1, +1]. The domain of the square root is a non-negative radicand. The range of the square root is non-negative as well. The range of x^2 is non-negative too.

arccos(\sqrt{1/4-x^2})

means

-1 \le sqrt{1/4 -x^2} le 1

Of course the square root can't be negative so we're ok on that end and we up the bound to zero. Squaring,

0 le 1/4-x^2 le 1

That's two inequalities:

0 le 1/4 - x^2

x^2 \le 1/4

-1/2 le x le 1/2

Other inequality,

1/4-x^2 le 1

1/4 -1 le x^2

-3/4 le x^2

That's always true, we can ignore it.

We're left with

-1/2 le x le 1/2

Turning our attention to the radicand, given this range,

0 \le 1/4 - x^2 le 1/4

0 le \sqrt{1/4 - x^2} le 1/2

We know we'd hit the biggest cliche of trig sooner or later. A cosine of 0 means 90^circ, +1/2 is 60^circ. So over the domain the principal value of the inverse cosine will be

pi/3 \le arccos(\sqrt{1/4-x^2}) le {pi}/2