How can we prove that tan(2x) = 2tan(x) / (1 – tan^2(x))?

To prove the identity tan(2x) = \frac{2tan(x)}{1 – tan^2(x)}, we can start by using the double angle formula for tangent. The double angle formula states:

tan(2x) = \frac{2tan(x)}{1 – tan^2(x)}

Here’s a step-by-step breakdown of the proof:

  1. Recall the definitions: The tangent function can be expressed as the ratio of sine and cosine functions:
  2. tan(x) = \frac{sin(x)}{cos(x)}

  3. Use the sine and cosine double angle formulas: We know:
  4. sin(2x) = 2sin(x)cos(x)

    cos(2x) = cos^2(x) – sin^2(x)

  5. Express tan(2x) using sin(2x) and cos(2x):
  6. tan(2x) = \frac{sin(2x)}{cos(2x)} = \frac{2sin(x)cos(x)}{cos^2(x) – sin^2(x)}

  7. Rewrite sin and cos in terms of tan:
  8. Recall that sin(x) = \frac{tan(x)cos(x)}{1 + tan^2(x)} and cos(x) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1 + tan^2(x)}}.

  9. Substituting tan(x):
  10. From above, expressing sin and cos in terms of tan leads to:

    sin(x) = \frac{tan(x)}{\sqrt{1 + tan^2(x)}}

    substituting back we derive:
    \frac{2tan(x)\frac{1}{\sqrt{1 + tan^2(x)}}(\sqrt{1 + tan^2(x)})}{\frac{1 – tan^2(x)}{1 + tan^2(x)}}.

  11. Simplification: When everything is simplified, we arrive back to:
  12. tan(2x) = \frac{2tan(x)}{1 – tan^2(x)}.

Thus, by verifying the derivations step by step, we confirm that the identity holds:

tan(2x) = \frac{2tan(x)}{1 – tan^2(x)}

This completes our proof!

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