How do you find Tan^-1(-1) without a calculator?

2 Answers
Nov 5, 2015

The answer is -pi/4π4

Explanation:

Alright, archtan / tan^-1(x)tan1(x) is the inverse of tangent. Tan is sin/cossincos. Like the inverse of sin, the inverse of tan is also restricted to quadrants 1 and 4.

Knowing this we are solving for the inverse of tan -1. We are basically being asked the question what angle/radian does tan(-1) equal. Using the unit circle we can see that tan(1)= pi/4.

Since the "Odds and Evens Identity" states that tan(-x) = -tan(x). Tan(-1)= -pi/4.

Knowing that tan is negative in quadrants 2 and 4. the answer is in either of those two quadrants. BUT!!! since inverse of tan is restricted to quadrants 1 and 4 we are left with the only answer -pi/4.enter image source here

I am a college student taking Trig. please add any thing that could be wrong or added to benefit the answer. Hope this helped! :)

May 21, 2018

We reason arctan(1)arctan(1) is 45^circ45 in the first and 225^circ225 in the third quadrant too, so arctan(-1)arctan(1) is the analog in the second (135^circ135) and fourth (-45^circ45), the latter being the principal value.

Explanation:

My answer's a bit more jaded than the other answer.

Trig students are only expected to know "exactly" the trig functions of two triangles, 30/60/90 and 45/45/90. It seems insane to have a whole field about just two triangles, but once you accept it trig becomes easier.

So you only need to know two triangles, but you need to know them in each quadrant, or at least be able to figure them out.

I really don't like the notation tan^{-1}(x)tan1(x) for arctan(x)arctan(x). I prefer the small letter arctan(x)arctan(x) to be multivalued, reserving text{Arc}text{tan}(x)Arctan(x) for the principal value.

arctan(x) = text{Arc}text{tan}(x) + 180^circ k quad integer k, or,

arctan(x) = text{Arc}text{tan}(x) + kpi quad in radians.

We'll "solve" both text{Arc}text{tan}(-1) and arctan(-1).

There's not a lot of solving involved. The expression arctan(1) means all the angles whose tangents are 1. Tangents are slopes so that's all angles whose rays have a slope of 1. That's one of our two triangles, 45^circ and 180^circ+45^circ=225^circ plus their coterminal brethren.

We have arctan(-1). The negative slope means we're after the analogous triangles in the second and fourth quadrants. That's -45^circ in the fourth quadrant and 135^circ in the second.

So

arctan(-1) = -45^circ + 180^circ k quad integer k

The principal value for all these inverse functions are the continuous part which includes the first quadrant. Tangent blows up at 90^circ so that's -90^circ to 90^circ.

text{Arc}text{tan}(-1) = -45^circ

In radians

arctan(-1) = -pi/4 + k pi quad integer k

text{Arc}text{tan}(-1) = -pi/4