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COMEDK · Maths · 8. Trigonometric Ratios & Identities

If \(\cos \theta=\dfrac{1}{2}\left(x+\dfrac{1}{x}\right)\) then \(\dfrac{1}{2}\left(x^2+\dfrac{1}{x^2}\right)=\)

  1. A \(\cos ^2 \theta-\sin ^2 \theta\)
  2. B \(2\left(\cos ^2 \theta-\sin ^2 \theta\right)\)
  3. C \(\sin ^2 \theta-\cos ^2 \theta\)
  4. D \(\dfrac{1}{2}\left(\sin ^2 \theta-\cos ^2 \theta\right)\)
Verified Solution

Answer & Solution

Correct Answer

(A) \(\cos ^2 \theta-\sin ^2 \theta\)

Step-by-step Solution

Detailed explanation

Given \(\cos \theta = \dfrac{1}{2}\left(x + \dfrac{1}{x}\right)\), we have \(x + \dfrac{1}{x} = 2 \cos \theta\). Squaring both sides: \(\left(x + \dfrac{1}{x}\right)^2 = (2 \cos \theta)^2\) \(x^2 + \dfrac{1}{x^2} + 2 = 4 \cos^2 \theta\)…