| Abel Flint - 1838 - 348 páginas
...CASE depends on the following PROPOSITION. IN EVERY PLANE TRIANGLE, AS THE SUM OF ANY TWO SIDES ISTO THEIR DIFFERENCE, SO IS THE TANGENT OF HALF THE SUM OF THE TWO OPPOSITE ANGLES TO THE TANGENT OF HALF THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEM. ADD THIS HALF DIFFERENCE TO... | |
| Jeremiah Day - 1839 - 434 páginas
...other radius. (Art. 119.) THEOREM II. 144. In a plane triangle, As THE SUM OF ANY TWO OF THE SIDES, To THEIR DIFFERENCE ; So IS THE TANGENT OF HALF THE SUM OF THE OPPOSITE ANGLES J To THE TANGENT OF HALF THEIR DIFFERENCE. Thus, the sum of AB and AC, (Fig. 25.) is... | |
| Joseph Gwilt - 1842 - 1114 páginas
...said unknown angles ; and using the following ratio, we have — As the sum of the two given sides Is to their difference, So is the tangent of half the sum of their opposite angles To the tangent of half the difference of the same angles. Now the half sum of... | |
| John Playfair - 1842 - 332 páginas
...then will the radius be to the tangent of the difference between that angle and half a right angle, as the tangent of half the sum of the angles, at the base of the triangle to the tangent of half their difference. Let ABC be a triangle, the sides of which... | |
| Enoch Lewis - 1844 - 240 páginas
...cos CAD : cos CAB : : tan AD : tan AB. QED ART. 72. As the sum of the sines of any two unequal arcs is to their difference, so is the tangent of half the sum of those arcs, to the tangent of half their difference. Let AB, AC be the arcs ; L the centre of the circle... | |
| Nathan Scholfield - 1845 - 894 páginas
...sine of half their difference: also, that the base is to the sum of the other two sides as the cosine of half the sum of the angles at the base, to the cosine of half their difference. Ex. 10. How must three trees, A, B, C, be planted, so that the angle... | |
| Nathan Scholfield - 1845 - 506 páginas
...sine of half their difference : also, that the base is to the sum of the other two sides as the cosine of half the sum of the angles at the base, to the cosine of half their difference. Ex. 10. How must three trees, A, B, C, be planted, so that the angle... | |
| Nathan Scholfield - 1845 - 542 páginas
...Prove that, in any plane triangle, the base is to the difference of the other two sides, as the sine of half the sum of the angles at the base, to the sine of half their difference : also-, that the base is to the sum of the other two sides as the cosine... | |
| Nathaniel Bowditch - 1846 - 854 páginas
...same angles. Thus, in the triangle ABC, if we call AB the base, it will l>e, As the sum of AC and CB is to their difference, so is the tangent of half the sum of the angles ABC, ВАС, to the tangent of half their dinerence. DH Dem. With the longest leg, CB, as radius, describe... | |
| Dennis M'Curdy - 1846 - 168 páginas
...J(AC-(AB): tan. J(AC—AB). QED 4 Th. In any triangle, the sum of two sides is to their difference, as the tangent of half the sum of the angles at the base is to the tangent of half their difference. Given the triangle ABC, the side AB being greater than... | |
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