Courses
Courses for Kids
Free study material
Offline Centres
More
Store Icon
Store
seo-qna
SearchIcon
banner

How do you solve the equation on the interval $\left[ {0,2pi} \right]$ for $2{(\cos (t))^2} - \cos (t) - 1 = 0$?

Answer
VerifiedVerified
564.6k+ views
Hint: We will solve the question by making it as a quadratic equation and use the property of the coefficient of quadratic equations to get the roots and then solve the question on the given interval. Finally we get the required answer.

Complete step-by-step solution:
We have the given equation as:
$2{(\cos (t))^2} - \cos (t) - 1 = 0$
Since the equation in the form of a quadratic equation $a{x^2} + bx + c = 0$
Where $x = \cos (t) \to (1)$
We get the coefficients $a,b$ and $c$ as follows:
$a = 2$
$b = - 1$
$c = - 1$
Since in any given quadratic equation which has the sum of coefficients $0$which means $a + b + c = 0$
The roots are $x = 1$ and $x = \dfrac{c}{a}$
Therefore, in the given equation the roots are: $x = 1$ and $x = \dfrac{{ - 1}}{2}$
Now the value of $x$ from equation $(1)$ is $\cos (t)$
Therefore, we can write:
$\cos t = 1$ and $\cos t = \dfrac{{ - 1}}{2}$
Now $\cos t = 1$ when $t = 0$ or $t = 2\pi $
And $\cos t = \dfrac{{ - 1}}{2}$ when $t = \pm \dfrac{{2\pi }}{3}$
Now we know $arc\dfrac{{4\pi }}{3}$ is coterminal to $arc\left( {\dfrac{{ - 2\pi }}{3}} \right)$

Therefore, the answer for the interval $\left[ {0,2pi} \right]$ will be:
$0,\dfrac{{2\pi }}{3},\dfrac{{4\pi }}{3},2\pi $, which is the required final answer.


Note: The formula for the roots of the equation when the sum of the roots is $0$ should be remembered for solving these types of questions.
The trigonometric table should be remembered to get the appropriate value of the angle, the angle can be written as degrees or radians.
It is to be remembered which trigonometric functions are positive and negative in what quadrants to get the sign of the angle.
We have used the property of coterminal angles which means that the angles which have the same sides in the triangle.
The general form of writing coterminal angles is $\theta \pm k(2\pi )$ where $\theta $ is the initial angle, $k$ is a constant multiplied by $2\pi $ because whenever angle is multiplied by $2\pi $ it has the same sides as the initial angle.