List of trigonometric identities

In trigonometry, trigonometric identities are equalities that involve trigonometric functions and are true for every value of the occurring variables for which both sides of the equality are defined. Geometrically, these are identities involving certain functions of one or more angles. They are distinct from triangle identities, which are identities potentially involving angles but also involving side lengths or other lengths of a triangle.

These identities are useful whenever expressions involving trigonometric functions need to be simplified. An important application is the integration of non-trigonometric functions: a common technique involves first using the substitution rule with a trigonometric function, and then simplifying the resulting integral with a trigonometric identity.

Pythagorean identities edit

 
Trigonometric functions and their reciprocals on the unit circle. All of the right-angled triangles are similar, i.e. the ratios between their corresponding sides are the same. For sin, cos and tan the unit-length radius forms the hypotenuse of the triangle that defines them. The reciprocal identities arise as ratios of sides in the triangles where this unit line is no longer the hypotenuse. The triangle shaded blue illustrates the identity  , and the red triangle shows that  .

The basic relationship between the sine and cosine is given by the Pythagorean identity:

 

where   means   and   means  

This can be viewed as a version of the Pythagorean theorem, and follows from the equation   for the unit circle. This equation can be solved for either the sine or the cosine:

 

where the sign depends on the quadrant of  

Dividing this identity by  ,  , or both yields the following identities:

 

Using these identities, it is possible to express any trigonometric function in terms of any other (up to a plus or minus sign):

Each trigonometric function in terms of each of the other five.[1]
in terms of            
             
             
             
             
             
             

Reflections, shifts, and periodicity edit

By examining the unit circle, one can establish the following properties of the trigonometric functions.

Reflections edit

 
Transformation of coordinates (a,b) when shifting the reflection angle   in increments of  .

When the direction of a Euclidean vector is represented by an angle   this is the angle determined by the free vector (starting at the origin) and the positive  -unit vector. The same concept may also be applied to lines in a Euclidean space, where the angle is that determined by a parallel to the given line through the origin and the positive  -axis. If a line (vector) with direction   is reflected about a line with direction   then the direction angle   of this reflected line (vector) has the value

 

The values of the trigonometric functions of these angles   for specific angles   satisfy simple identities: either they are equal, or have opposite signs, or employ the complementary trigonometric function. These are also known as reduction formulae.[2]

  reflected in  [3]
odd/even identities
  reflected in     reflected in     reflected in     reflected in  
compare to  
         
         
         
         
         
         

Shifts and periodicity edit

 
Transformation of coordinates (a,b) when shifting the angle   in increments of  .
Shift by one quarter period Shift by one half period Shift by full periods[4] Period
       
       
       
       
       
       

Signs edit

The sign of trigonometric functions depends on quadrant of the angle. If   and sgn is the sign function,

 

The trigonometric functions are periodic with common period   so for values of θ outside the interval   they take repeating values (see § Shifts and periodicity above).

Angle sum and difference identities edit

 
Illustration of angle addition formulae for the sine and cosine of acute angles. Emphasized segment is of unit length.
 
Diagram showing the angle difference identities for   and  .

These are also known as the angle addition and subtraction theorems (or formulae).

 

The angle difference identities for   and   can be derived from the angle sum versions by substituting   for   and using the facts that   and  . They can also be derived by using a slightly modified version of the figure for the angle sum identities, both of which are shown here.

These identities are summarized in the first two rows of the following table, which also includes sum and difference identities for the other trigonometric functions.

Sine      [5][6]
Cosine      [6][7]
Tangent      [6][8]
Cosecant      [9]
Secant      [9]
Cotangent      [6][10]
Arcsine      [11]
Arccosine      [12]
Arctangent      [13]
Arccotangent      

Sines and cosines of sums of infinitely many angles edit

When the series   converges absolutely then

 

Because the series   converges absolutely, it is necessarily the case that     and   In particular, in these two identities an asymmetry appears that is not seen in the case of sums of finitely many angles: in each product, there are only finitely many sine factors but there are cofinitely many cosine factors. Terms with infinitely many sine factors would necessarily be equal to zero.

When only finitely many of the angles   are nonzero then only finitely many of the terms on the right side are nonzero because all but finitely many sine factors vanish. Furthermore, in each term all but finitely many of the cosine factors are unity.

Tangents and cotangents of sums edit

Let   (for  ) be the kth-degree elementary symmetric polynomial in the variables

 
for   that is,

 

Then

 

using the sine and cosine sum formulae above.

The number of terms on the right side depends on the number of terms on the left side.

For example:

 

and so on. The case of only finitely many terms can be proved by mathematical induction.[14] The case of infinitely many terms can be proved by using some elementary inequalities.[15]

Secants and cosecants of sums edit

 

where   is the kth-degree elementary symmetric polynomial in the n variables     and the number of terms in the denominator and the number of factors in the product in the numerator depend on the number of terms in the sum on the left.[16] The case of only finitely many terms can be proved by mathematical induction on the number of such terms.

For example,

 

Ptolemy's theorem edit

 
Diagram illustrating the relation between Ptolemy's theorem and the angle sum trig identity for sine. Ptolemy's theorem states that the sum of the products of the lengths of opposite sides is equal to the product of the lengths of the diagonals. When those side-lengths are expressed in terms of the sin and cos values shown in the figure above, this yields the angle sum trigonometric identity for sine: sin(α + β) = sin α cos β + cos α sin β.

Ptolemy's theorem is important in the history of trigonometric identities, as it is how results equivalent to the sum and difference formulas for sine and cosine were first proved. It states that in a cyclic quadrilateral  , as shown in the accompanying figure, the sum of the products of the lengths of opposite sides is equal to the product of the lengths of the diagonals. In the special cases of one of the diagonals or sides being a diameter of the circle, this theorem gives rise directly to the angle sum and difference trigonometric identities.[17] The relationship follows most easily when the circle is constructed to have a diameter of length one, as shown here.

By Thales's theorem,   and   are both right angles. The right-angled triangles   and   both share the hypotenuse   of length 1. Thus, the side  ,  ,   and  .

By the inscribed angle theorem, the central angle subtended by the chord   at the circle's center is twice the angle  , i.e.  . Therefore, the symmetrical pair of red triangles each has the angle   at the center. Each of these triangles has a hypotenuse of length  , so the length of   is  , i.e. simply  . The quadrilateral's other diagonal is the diameter of length 1, so the product of the diagonals' lengths is also  .

When these values are substituted into the statement of Ptolemy's theorem that  , this yields the angle sum trigonometric identity for sine:  . The angle difference formula for   can be similarly derived by letting the side   serve as a diameter instead of  .[17]

Multiple-angle and half-angle formulae edit

Tn is the nth Chebyshev polynomial  [18]
de Moivre's formula, i is the imaginary unit  [19]

Multiple-angle formulae edit

Double-angle formulae edit

 
Visual demonstration of the double-angle formula for sine. For the above isosceles triangle with unit sides and angle  , the area 1/2 × base × height is calculated in two orientations. When upright, the area is  . When on its side, the same area is  . Therefore,  

Formulae for twice an angle.[20]

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Triple-angle formulae edit

Formulae for triple angles.[20]

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Multiple-angle formulae edit

Formulae for multiple angles.[21]

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Chebyshev method edit

The Chebyshev method is a recursive algorithm for finding the nth multiple angle formula knowing the  th and  th values.[22]

  can be computed from  ,  , and   with

 

This can be proved by adding together the formulae

 

It follows by induction that   is a polynomial of   the so-called Chebyshev polynomial of the first kind, see Chebyshev polynomials#Trigonometric definition.

Similarly,   can be computed from     and   with

 
This can be proved by adding formulae for   and  

Serving a purpose similar to that of the Chebyshev method, for the tangent we can write:

 

Half-angle formulae edit

 
[23][24]

Also

 

Table edit

These can be shown by using either the sum and difference identities or the multiple-angle formulae.

Sine Cosine Tangent Cotangent
Double-angle formula[25][26]        
Triple-angle formula[18][27]        
Half-angle formula[23][24]        

The fact that the triple-angle formula for sine and cosine only involves powers of a single function allows one to relate the geometric problem of a compass and straightedge construction of angle trisection to the algebraic problem of solving a cubic equation, which allows one to prove that trisection is in general impossible using the given tools, by field theory. [citation needed]

A formula for computing the trigonometric identities for the one-third angle exists, but it requires finding the zeroes of the cubic equation 4x3 − 3x + d = 0, where   is the value of the cosine function at the one-third angle and d is the known value of the cosine function at the full angle. However, the discriminant of this equation is positive, so this equation has three real roots (of which only one is the solution for the cosine of the one-third angle). None of these solutions are reducible to a real algebraic expression, as they use intermediate complex numbers under the cube roots.

Power-reduction formulae edit

Obtained by solving the second and third versions of the cosine double-angle formula.

Sine Cosine Other
     
     
     
     
 
Cosine power-reduction formula: an illustrative diagram. The red, orange and blue triangles are all similar, and the red and orange triangles are congruent. The hypotenuse   of the blue triangle has length  . The angle   is  , so the base   of that triangle has length  . That length is also equal to the summed lengths of   and  , i.e.  . Therefore,  . Dividing both sides by   yields the power-reduction formula for cosine:    . The half-angle formula for cosine can be obtained by replacing   with   and taking the square-root of both sides:  
 
Sine power-reduction formula: an illustrative diagram. The shaded blue and green triangles, and the red-outlined triangle   are all right-angled and similar, and all contain the angle  . The hypotenuse   of the red-outlined triangle has length  , so its side   has length  . The line segment   has length   and sum of the lengths of   and   equals the length of  , which is 1. Therefore,  . Subtracting   from both sides and dividing by 2 by two yields the power-reduction formula for sine:    . The half-angle formula for sine can be obtained by replacing   with   and taking the square-root of both sides:   Note that this figure also illustrates, in the vertical line segment  , that  .

In general terms of powers of   or   the following is true, and can be deduced using De Moivre's formula, Euler's formula and the binomial theorem.

if n is ...    
n is odd    
n is even    

Product-to-sum and sum-to-product identities edit

The product-to-sum identities[28] or prosthaphaeresis formulae can be proven by expanding their right-hand sides using the angle addition theorems. Historically, the first four of these were known as Werner's formulas, after Johannes Werner who used them for astronomical calculations.[29] See amplitude modulation for an application of the product-to-sum formulae, and beat (acoustics) and phase detector for applications of the sum-to-product formulae.

Product-to-sum identities edit

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Sum-to-product identities edit

 
Diagram illustrating sum-to-product identities for sine and cosine. The blue right-angled triangle has angle   and the red right-angled triangle has angle  . Both have a hypotenuse of length 1. Auxiliary angles, here called   and  , are constructed such that   and  . Therefore,   and  . This allows the two congruent purple-outline triangles   and   to be constructed, each with hypotenuse   and angle   at their base. The sum of the heights of the red and blue triangles is  , and this is equal to twice the height of one purple triangle, i.e.  . Writing   and   in that equation in terms of   and   yields a sum-to-product identity for sine:  . Similarly, the sum of the widths of the red and blue triangles yields the corresponding identity for cosine.

The sum-to-product identities are as follows:[30]

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Hermite's cotangent identity edit

Charles Hermite demonstrated the following identity.[31] Suppose   are complex numbers, no two of which differ by an integer multiple of π. Let

 

(in particular,   being an empty product, is 1). Then

 

The simplest non-trivial example is the case n = 2:

 

Finite products of trigonometric functions edit

For coprime integers n, m

 

where Tn is the Chebyshev polynomial.[citation needed]

The following relationship holds for the sine function

 

More generally for an integer n > 0[32]

 

or written in terms of the chord function  ,

 

This comes from the factorization of the polynomial   into linear factors (cf. root of unity): For a point z on the complex unit circle and an integer n > 0,

 

Linear combinations edit

For some purposes it is important to know that any linear combination of sine waves of the same period or frequency but different phase shifts is also a sine wave with the same period or frequency, but a different phase shift. This is useful in sinusoid data fitting, because the measured or observed data are linearly related to the a and b unknowns of the in-phase and quadrature components basis below, resulting in a simpler Jacobian, compared to that of   and  .

Sine and cosine edit

The linear combination, or harmonic addition, of sine and cosine waves is equivalent to a single sine wave with a phase shift and scaled amplitude,[33][34]

 

where   and   are defined as so:

 

given that  

Arbitrary phase shift edit

More generally, for arbitrary phase shifts, we have

 

where   and   satisfy:

 

More than two sinusoids edit

The general case reads[34]

 
where
 
and
 

Lagrange's trigonometric identities edit

These identities, named after Joseph Louis Lagrange, are:[35][36][37]

 
for  

A related function is the Dirichlet kernel:

 

A similar identity is[38]

 

The proof is the following. By using the angle sum and difference identities,

 
Then let's examine the following formula,

 
and this formula can be written by using the above identity,

 

So, dividing this formula with   completes the proof.

Certain linear fractional transformations edit

If   is given by the linear fractional transformation

 
and similarly
 
then
 

More tersely stated, if for all   we let   be what we called   above, then

 

If   is the slope of a line, then   is the slope of its rotation through an angle of  

Relation to the complex exponential function edit

Euler's formula states that, for any real number x:[39]

 
where i is the imaginary unit. Substituting −x for x gives us:
 

These two equations can be used to solve for cosine and sine in terms of the exponential function. Specifically,[40][41]

 
 

These formulae are useful for proving many other trigonometric identities. For example, that ei(θ+φ) = e e means that

cos(θ + φ) + i sin(θ + φ) = (cos θ + i sin θ) (cos φ + i sin φ) = (cos θ cos φ − sin θ sin φ) + i (cos θ sin φ + sin θ cos φ).

That the real part of the left hand side equals the real part of the right hand side is an angle addition formula for cosine. The equality of the imaginary parts gives an angle addition formula for sine.

The following table expresses the trigonometric functions and their inverses in terms of the exponential function and the complex logarithm.

Function Inverse function[42]
   
   
   
   
   
   
   

Series expansion edit

When using a power series expansion to define trigonometric functions, the following identities are obtained:[43]

 
 

Infinite product formulae edit

For applications to special functions, the following infinite product formulae for trigonometric functions are useful:[44][45]

 

Inverse trigonometric functions edit

The following identities give the result of composing a trigonometric function with an inverse trigonometric function.[46]

 

Taking the multiplicative inverse of both sides of the each equation above results in the equations for   The right hand side of the formula above will always be flipped. For example, the equation for   is:

 
while the equations for   and   are:
 

The following identities are implied by the reflection identities. They hold whenever   are in the domains of the relevant functions.

 

Also,[47]

 
 
 

The arctangent function can be expanded as a series:[48]

 

Identities without variables edit

In terms of the arctangent function we have[47]

 

The curious identity known as Morrie's law,

 

is a special case of an identity that contains one variable:

 

Similarly,

 
is a special case of an identity with  :
 

For the case  ,

 

For the case  ,

 

The same cosine identity is

 

Similarly,

 

Similarly,

 

The following is perhaps not as readily generalized to an identity containing variables (but see explanation below):

 

Degree measure ceases to be more felicitous than radian measure when we consider this identity with 21 in the denominators:

 

The factors 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 10 may start to make the pattern clear: they are those integers less than 21/2 that are relatively prime to (or have no prime factors in common with) 21. The last several examples are corollaries of a basic fact about the irreducible cyclotomic polynomials: the cosines are the real parts of the zeroes of those polynomials; the sum of the zeroes is the Möbius function evaluated at (in the very last case above) 21; only half of the zeroes are present above. The two identities preceding this last one arise in the same fashion with 21 replaced by 10 and 15, respectively.

Other cosine identities include:[49]

 
and so forth for all odd numbers, and hence
 

Many of those curious identities stem from more general facts like the following:[50]

 
and
 

Combining these gives us

 

If n is an odd number ( ) we can make use of the symmetries to get

 

The transfer function of the Butterworth low pass filter can be expressed in terms of polynomial and poles. By setting the frequency as the cutoff frequency, the following identity can be proved:

 

Computing π edit

An efficient way to compute π to a large number of digits is based on the following identity without variables, due to Machin. This is known as a Machin-like formula:

 
or, alternatively, by using an identity of Leonhard Euler:
 
or by using Pythagorean triples:
 

Others include:[51][47]

 
 
 

Generally, for numbers t1, ..., tn−1 ∈ (−1, 1) for which θn = Σn−1
k=1
arctan tk ∈ (π/4, 3π/4)
, let tn = tan(π/2 − θn) = cot θn. This last expression can be computed directly using the formula for the cotangent of a sum of angles whose tangents are t1, ..., tn−1 and its value will be in (−1, 1). In particular, the computed tn will be rational whenever all the t1, ..., tn−1 values are rational. With these values,

 

where in all but the first expression, we have used tangent half-angle formulae. The first two formulae work even if one or more of the tk values is not within (−1, 1). Note that if t = p/q is rational, then the (2t, 1 − t2, 1 + t2) values in the above formulae are proportional to the Pythagorean triple (2pq, q2p2, q2 + p2).

For example, for n = 3 terms,

 
for any a, b, c, d > 0.

An identity of Euclid edit

Euclid showed in Book XIII, Proposition 10 of his Elements that the area of the square on the side of a regular pentagon inscribed in a circle is equal to the sum of the areas of the squares on the sides of the regular hexagon and the regular decagon inscribed in the same circle. In the language of modern trigonometry, this says:

 

Ptolemy used this proposition to compute some angles in his table of chords in Book I, chapter 11 of Almagest.

Composition of trigonometric functions edit

These identities involve a trigonometric function of a trigonometric function:[52]

 
 
 
 

where Ji are Bessel functions.

Further "conditional" identities for the case α + β + γ = 180° edit

A conditional trigonometric identity is a trigonometric identity that holds if specified conditions on the arguments to the trigonometric functions are satisfied.[53] The following formulae apply to arbitrary plane triangles and follow from   as long as the functions occurring in the formulae are well-defined (the latter applies only to the formulae in which tangents and cotangents occur).

 

Historical shorthands edit

The versine, coversine, haversine, and exsecant were used in navigation. For example, the haversine formula was used to calculate the distance between two points on a sphere. They are rarely used today.

Miscellaneous edit

Dirichlet kernel edit

The Dirichlet kernel Dn(x) is the function occurring on both sides of the next identity:

 

The convolution of any integrable function of period   with the Dirichlet kernel coincides with the function's  th-degree Fourier approximation. The same holds for any measure or generalized function.

Tangent half-angle substitution edit

If we set

 
then[54]
 
where   sometimes abbreviated to cis x.

When this substitution of   for tan x/2 is used in calculus, it follows that   is replaced by 2t/1 + t2,   is replaced by 1 − t2/1 + t2 and the differential dx is replaced by 2 dt/1 + t2. Thereby one converts rational functions of   and   to rational functions of   in order to find their antiderivatives.

Viète's infinite product edit

 

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Abramowitz, Milton; Stegun, Irene Ann, eds. (1983) [June 1964]. "Chapter 4, eqn 4.3.45". Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables. Applied Mathematics Series. Vol. 55 (Ninth reprint with additional corrections of tenth original printing with corrections (December 1972); first ed.). Washington D.C.; New York: United States Department of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards; Dover Publications. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-486-61272-0. LCCN 64-60036. MR 0167642. LCCN 65-12253.
  2. ^ Selby 1970, p. 188
  3. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.13–15
  4. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.7–9
  5. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.16
  6. ^ a b c d Weisstein, Eric W. "Trigonometric Addition Formulas". MathWorld.
  7. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.17
  8. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.18
  9. ^ a b "Angle Sum and Difference Identities". www.milefoot.com. Retrieved 2019-10-12.
  10. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.19
  11. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 80, 4.4.32
  12. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 80, 4.4.33
  13. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 80, 4.4.34
  14. ^ Bronstein, Manuel (1989). "Simplification of real elementary functions". In Gonnet, G. H. (ed.). Proceedings of the ACM-SIGSAM 1989 International Symposium on Symbolic and Algebraic Computation. ISSAC '89 (Portland US-OR, 1989-07). New York: ACM. pp. 207–211. doi:10.1145/74540.74566. ISBN 0-89791-325-6.
  15. ^ Michael Hardy. (2016). "On Tangents and Secants of Infinite Sums." The American Mathematical Monthly, volume 123, number 7, 701–703. https://doi.org/10.4169/amer.math.monthly.123.7.701
  16. ^ Hardy, Michael (2016). "On Tangents and Secants of Infinite Sums". American Mathematical Monthly. 123 (7): 701–703. doi:10.4169/amer.math.monthly.123.7.701.
  17. ^ a b "Sine, Cosine, and Ptolemy's Theorem".
  18. ^ a b Weisstein, Eric W. "Multiple-Angle Formulas". MathWorld.
  19. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 74, 4.3.48
  20. ^ a b Selby 1970, pg. 190
  21. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Multiple-Angle Formulas". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2022-02-06.
  22. ^ Ward, Ken. "Multiple angles recursive formula". Ken Ward's Mathematics Pages.
  23. ^ a b Abramowitz, Milton; Stegun, Irene Ann, eds. (1983) [June 1964]. "Chapter 4, eqn 4.3.20-22". Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables. Applied Mathematics Series. Vol. 55 (Ninth reprint with additional corrections of tenth original printing with corrections (December 1972); first ed.). Washington D.C.; New York: United States Department of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards; Dover Publications. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-486-61272-0. LCCN 64-60036. MR 0167642. LCCN 65-12253.
  24. ^ a b Weisstein, Eric W. "Half-Angle Formulas". MathWorld.
  25. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.24–26
  26. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Double-Angle Formulas". MathWorld.
  27. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.27–28
  28. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.31–33
  29. ^ Eves, Howard (1990). An introduction to the history of mathematics (6th ed.). Philadelphia: Saunders College Pub. p. 309. ISBN 0-03-029558-0. OCLC 20842510.
  30. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.34–39
  31. ^ Johnson, Warren P. (Apr 2010). "Trigonometric Identities à la Hermite". American Mathematical Monthly. 117 (4): 311–327. doi:10.4169/000298910x480784. S2CID 29690311.
  32. ^ "Product Identity Multiple Angle".
  33. ^ Apostol, T.M. (1967) Calculus. 2nd edition. New York, NY, Wiley. Pp 334-335.
  34. ^ a b Weisstein, Eric W. "Harmonic Addition Theorem". MathWorld.
  35. ^ Ortiz Muñiz, Eddie (Feb 1953). "A Method for Deriving Various Formulas in Electrostatics and Electromagnetism Using Lagrange's Trigonometric Identities". American Journal of Physics. 21 (2): 140. Bibcode:1953AmJPh..21..140M. doi:10.1119/1.1933371.
  36. ^ Agarwal, Ravi P.; O'Regan, Donal (2008). Ordinary and Partial Differential Equations: With Special Functions, Fourier Series, and Boundary Value Problems (illustrated ed.). Springer Science & Business Media. p. 185. ISBN 978-0-387-79146-3. Extract of page 185
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  38. ^ Fay, Temple H.; Kloppers, P. Hendrik (2001). "The Gibbs' phenomenon". International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology. 32 (1): 73–89. doi:10.1080/00207390117151.
  39. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 74, 4.3.47
  40. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 71, 4.3.2
  41. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 71, 4.3.1
  42. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 80, 4.4.26–31
  43. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 74, 4.3.65–66
  44. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 75, 4.3.89–90
  45. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 85, 4.5.68–69
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  48. ^ S. M. Abrarov, R. K. Jagpal, R. Siddiqui and B. M. Quine (2021), "Algorithmic determination of a large integer in the two-term Machin-like formula for π", Mathematics, 9 (17), 2162, arXiv:2107.01027, doi:10.3390/math9172162{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  51. ^ Harris, Edward M. "Sums of Arctangents", in Roger B. Nelson, Proofs Without Words (1993, Mathematical Association of America), p. 39.
  52. ^ Milton Abramowitz and Irene Stegun, Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables, Dover Publications, New York, 1972, formulae 9.1.42–9.1.45
  53. ^ Er. K. C. Joshi, Krishna's IIT MATHEMATIKA. Krishna Prakashan Media. Meerut, India. page 636.
  54. ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 72, 4.3.23

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