How do you solve sin(2theta) + sin(4theta) = 0?

2 Answers
Apr 16, 2015

You can solve it with the formula sum-to-product, that says:

sinalpha+sinbeta=2sin((alpha+beta)/2)cos((alpha-beta)/2),

so:

sin2theta+sin4theta=0rArr2sin((2theta+4theta)/2)cos((2theta-4theta)/2)=0rArr

sin3thetacos(-theta)=0

so:

sin3theta=0rArr3theta=kpirArrtheta=kpi/3

and:

cos(-theta)=0rArrcostheta=0rArrtheta=pi/2+kpi.

(remembering that cos(-alpha)=cosalpha).

There is another way:

sin2theta=-sin4thetarArrsin3theta=sin(-4theta)

(remembering that sin(-alpha)=-sinalpha),

and than remembering that two sini are equal when the angles are equal or if the angles are supplementary,

2theta=-4theta+2kpirArr6theta=2kpirArrtheta=kpi/3

and

2theta=pi-(-4theta)+2kpirArr2theta=pi+4theta+2kpirArr

-2theta=pi+2kpirArrtheta=-pi/2-kpi that is formally identical to the second solution found before.

Oct 22, 2016

theta=(kpi)/2,pi/3+kpi,(2pi)/3+kpi" "," "kinZZ

Explanation:

The sine double-angle formula is sin(2alpha)=2sin(alpha)cos(alpha). Thus, sin(4theta)=2sin(2theta)cos(2theta). The given equation is then equivalent to

sin(2theta)+2sin(2theta)cos(2theta)=0

Factoring yields

sin(2theta)(1+2cos(2theta))=0

Now, we can solve the two resulting equations whose product is 0. The first gives

sin(2theta)=0

Thinking about when the sine function is 0, we see that

2theta=0,pi,2pi,3pi...

Which can be generalized when k is an integer by saying

2theta=kpi" "," "kinZZ

Note that kinZZ is the symbolic way of representing that k is an integer. Thus

color(blue)(theta=(kpi)/2" "," "kinZZ

The other resultant equation from before was

1+2cos(2theta)=0

So

cos(2theta)=-1/2

This happens at

2theta=(2pi)/3,(4pi)/3

And all of these angles coterminal versions, which are located at integer multiples of 2pi away. Thus

2theta=(2pi)/3+2kpi,(4pi)/3+2kpi" "," "kinZZ

Solving for theta yields

color(blue)(theta=pi/3+kpi,(2pi)/3+kpi" "," "kinZZ

We can combine all of our solutions into

color(red)(theta=(kpi)/2,pi/3+kpi,(2pi)/3+kpi" "," "kinZZ