A very bright young student of mine who has not learned trigonometry presented me with this question she came up with.
A unit circle is placed at the origin. At any point along the circle we can draw a tangent line and calculate its slope. Then we can plot (x-coordinate, slope). It seems to make this nice curved X shape. Can we make an equation for it?
Your task is to find an equation, without trigonometry.
Note: As interesting as it was to try drawing the shape on a whiteboard, I had to fight the urge to use trig for this equation. In fact, I think it has a nice parametric form using trig, so you could also find that. Or whatever you like. We were just playing around with some math.
(In reply to
solution by Charlie)
What am I missing here? The domain of the desired solution/plot should be -1 to 1 for a unit circle. The range should be +- infinity, with the two infinities associated with x= +-1? Not sure how the posted plot can have the values it has?
EDITED: Unless of course the graph posted by Charlie interchanges the x and y axes vs. typical convention then the plot shown is correct.
Edited on February 19, 2024, 5:33 pm
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Posted by Kenny M
on 2024-02-19 17:26:21 |