How do you prove tan^-1x+tan^-1(1/x)=pi/2 for x>0?

2 Answers
Jan 13, 2017

we first need to know the following relationships between tantheta &cot theta

we have:

cottheta=1/tantheta

also

cottheta=tan(pi/2-theta)

Explanation:

let y=tan^(-1)x=>x=tany

x=tany=>1/x=1/tany=coty

1/x=coty=tan(pi/2-y)

:.pi/2-y=tan^(-1)(1/x)

but y=tan^(-1)x

so pi/2=tan^(-1)(1/x)+tan^(-1)x

as reqd.

Jan 14, 2017

Take the addition formula for tangent:

tan(a+b)=(tan(a)+tan(b))/(1-tan(a)tan(b))

Rearranging:

a+b=tan^-1((tan(a)+tan(b))/(1-tan(a)tan(b)))

Let m=tan(a) and n=tan(b). These both imply that a=tan^-1(m) and b=tan^-1(n).

Plugging in all these values into the before formula gives:

tan^-1(m)+tan^-1(n)=tan^-1((m+n)/(1-mn))

This is applicable to the question, which asks about tan^-1(x)+tan^-1(1/x). According to the rule we've just derived:

tan^-1(x)+tan^-1(1/x)=tan^-1((x+1/x)/(1-x(1/x)))

tan^-1(x)+tan^-1(1/x)=tan^-1((x+1/x)/(1-1))

Since the denominator inside the inverse tangent function on the right-hand side is 0, we see that the argument of the function is undefined.

For x>0 and using the restricting the range of tan^-1(x) to (-pi/2,pi/2), we see that tangent is undefined at pi/2, so the inverse tangent of an undefined value is also pi/2.

Therefore:

tan^-1(x)+tan^-1(1/x)=pi/2