NOTE ON THE FORMULÆ OF TRIGONOMETRY.
[From the Johns Hopkins University Circulars, No. 17 (1882), p. 241.]
The equations a = c cos B + h cos C, h = a cos C + c cos A, c = b cos A + a cos B, which
connect together the sides a, b, c and the angles A, B, C of a plane triangle, may be
presented in an algebraical rational form, by introducing in place of the angles A, B, C
the functions cos A +i sin A, cos B + i sin B, cos C + i sin C, viz. calling these —, 2
& WWW
respectively, or, what is the same thing, writing 2 cos .4 = — +—, 2cosJS=—+ —,
w x iv y
z r uo
2 cos C = — 4- — , then the foregoing equations may be written
(- 2yzw , y (z 2 + w 2 ), z (y 2 + w 2 )\a, b, c ) = 0,
(x (z 2 + w 2 ), — 2zxw , z (x 2 + w 2 )]£ „ ) = 0,
(x(y 2 + w 2 ), y(x 2 +w 2 ), —2xyw ]£ „ ) = 0,
that is, as a system of bipartite equations linear in (a, b, c) and cubic in (x, y, z, w)
respectively.
Similarly in Spherical Trigonometry, writing as above for the angles, and for the
sides writing in like manner 2cosu=^+-, 2 cos 6 = ^ + ^, 2cosc = ^ + -, we have a
o a op o y
system of bipartite equations separately homogeneous in regard to (x, y, z, w) and
(a, /3, 7, 8) respectively.