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In this section, you will:
  • Understand and use the inverse sine, cosine, and tangent functions.
  • Find the exact value of expressions involving the inverse sine, cosine, and tangent functions.
  • Use a calculator to evaluate inverse trigonometric functions.
  • Find exact values of composite functions with inverse trigonometric functions.

For any right triangle , given one other angle and the length of one side, we can figure out what the other angles and sides are. But what if we are given only two sides of a right triangle? We need a procedure that leads us from a ratio of sides to an angle. This is where the notion of an inverse to a trigonometric function comes into play. In this section, we will explore the inverse trigonometric functions .

Understanding and using the inverse sine, cosine, and tangent functions

In order to use inverse trigonometric functions, we need to understand that an inverse trigonometric function “undoes” what the original trigonometric function “does,” as is the case with any other function and its inverse. In other words, the domain of the inverse function is the range of the original function, and vice versa, as summarized in [link] .

A chart that says “Trig Functinos”, “Inverse Trig Functions”, “Domain: Measure of an angle”, “Domain: Ratio”, “Range: Ratio”, and “Range: Measure of an angle”.

For example, if f ( x ) = sin x , then we would write f 1 ( x ) = sin 1 x . Be aware that sin 1 x does not mean 1 sin x . The following examples illustrate the inverse trigonometric functions:

  • Since sin ( π 6 ) = 1 2 , then π 6 = sin 1 ( 1 2 ) .
  • Since cos ( π ) = 1 , then π = cos 1 ( 1 ) .
  • Since tan ( π 4 ) = 1 , then π 4 = tan 1 ( 1 ) .

In previous sections, we evaluated the trigonometric functions at various angles, but at times we need to know what angle would yield a specific sine, cosine, or tangent value. For this, we need inverse functions. Recall that, for a one-to-one function    , if f ( a ) = b , then an inverse function would satisfy f 1 ( b ) = a .

Bear in mind that the sine, cosine, and tangent functions are not one-to-one functions. The graph of each function would fail the horizontal line test. In fact, no periodic function can be one-to-one because each output in its range corresponds to at least one input in every period, and there are an infinite number of periods. As with other functions that are not one-to-one, we will need to restrict the domain    of each function to yield a new function that is one-to-one. We choose a domain for each function that includes the number 0. [link] shows the graph of the sine function limited to [ π 2 , π 2 ] and the graph of the cosine function limited to [ 0 , π ] .

Two side-by-side graphs. The first graph, graph A, shows half of a period of the function sine of x. The second graph, graph B, shows half a period of the function cosine of x.
(a) Sine function on a restricted domain of [ π 2 , π 2 ] ; (b) Cosine function on a restricted domain of [ 0 , π ]

[link] shows the graph of the tangent function limited to ( π 2 , π 2 ) .

A graph of one period of tangent of x, from -pi/2 to pi/2.
Tangent function on a restricted domain of ( π 2 , π 2 )

These conventional choices for the restricted domain are somewhat arbitrary, but they have important, helpful characteristics. Each domain includes the origin and some positive values, and most importantly, each results in a one-to-one function that is invertible. The conventional choice for the restricted domain of the tangent function also has the useful property that it extends from one vertical asymptote    to the next instead of being divided into two parts by an asymptote.

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Source:  OpenStax, Precalculus. OpenStax CNX. Jan 19, 2016 Download for free at https://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11667/1.6
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