^ stats is crap, mechanics for the win!
This is why I dropped Maths after GCSE.
I just thought it would work because
1/sin^2θ = cosec^2θ etc etc
1/sin^2θ + 1/cos^2θ = 1/1 obviously you can't do that though.
The first one is fine, since cot = cos/sin = (1/sin)/(1/cos) = cosec/sec. The second one is wrong. cos^2 + sin^2 = 1, but that doesn't mean that 1/cos^2 + 1/sin^2 = 1. In fact, 1/cos^2 t + 1/sin^2 t = (cos^2 t + sin^2 t)/(cos^2 t sin^2 t) = 4cosec^2 (2t).
They are useful for mechanics for people asking. Although iirc this is core 3 core 4 stuff? Gonna be doing this when we go back after work shadowing.
It is trigonometry (triangles) but a step further than sin cos and tan.
So this is just for a triangle?? All that for a triangle
Glad I'm an arts student![]()
don't want to derail the thread but there's not much point making a new one... doing some physics revision and i'm not quite sure how to do this..
I was wondering if anyone knows how to get T the subject in this equation:
I = Io e^-t/CR
I thought it was ln(Io/I) X CR = -t but i'm not sure if that's right?
thanks
so this is useful how? No one said what it does... afaik