This note is about how to prove using squeeze theorem.
I have created a diagram to walk us through this procedure. In the diagram there are three shapes we will be addressing. There is the triangle (blue), the sector (red), and the triangle (green) which I have drawn on the unit circle.
If you are unfamiliar with the unit circle the main concept is that the unit circle has a radius of one, which is very useful for proving trigonometric identities nonetheless true in this case.
If you are unfamiliar with squeeze theorem It is the idea that if you have three quantities, quantity one, quantity two, and quantity three, where quantity one is less than or equal to quantity two, and quantity three is greater than or equal to quantity two, then at some point quantity one equals quantity three, and quantity two is also equal.
quantity 1 quantity 2 quantity 3
quantity 1 quantity 3
quantity 1 quantity 2 quantity 3
In our case we will be squeezing the area of the three shapes.
area of triangle area of sector area of triangle
Before we get into the trigonometric definition though I would like to start by pointing out that the angle is unknown. It could be anything. If theta equals zero we have a straight line. If it is 360 degrees we have a circle.
Triangle
Triangle is a right angled triangle where side length is the hypoteneuse which is equal to the radius of the unit circle which is equal to one.
Side is the oppostie side of angle .
Side is the adjacent side to angle
Given that:
And given that:
Then the area of the triangle is as follows:
Triangle
Triangle is another right angled triangle where side has a length that is equal to the radius of the unit circle which is equal to one.
Side is the adjacent side to angle
Side is the opposite side to angle
Given that:
And the area of triangle is as follows:
( via the quotient identity.
Sector
Sector is a fraction of the unit circle. So we still have our radius which is equal to one.
The angle that makes a circle in radians is so the fraction of the circle is .
Then the area of the sector is as follows:
Now we can substitute these formulas into our inequality and we will have to rearrange a few thing to find the limit we are looking for.
area of triangle area of sector area of triangle
mulitply everything by
divide everything by
find the limit of
Therefore
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Comments
It's an interesting approach, going through proving that using geometry!
I was thinking of a calculus-based proof:
If we prove, using basic calculus ( Variation -derivatives ...) , that:
sinx<x<tanx;∀x>0
tanx<x<sinx;∀x<0,
we could also conclude the value of the limit to be 1, after calculating both handed limits.
But proving that using geometry was exciting! Cheers!!
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Cheers.
It seems to me that you have merely shown that
sinθ≤θ≤tanθ.
How does that allow us to conclude what limθsinθ is?
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Sorry it's finished now. Hope I did alright.
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Right, that's the final step that's needed to draw the conclusion.
To get such "complicated" expressions to display nicely while inline, you will need to use \displaystyle, which forces the superscript / subscript, which increases out the line spacing (and hence making it uglier).
IE \displaystyle \lim_{x \rightarrow 0 } gives us x→0lim
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I couldn't get the →0 to go under the lim that was one thing I have to fix probably.
By observing the given problem limit extends to 0 means the answer might be infinite(or)zero