- Exsecant
The exsecant, also abbreviated exsec, is a
trigonometric function defined in terms of the secant function sec(θ)::.
Once important in fields such as
surveying ,astronomy , andspherical trigonometry , the exsecant function is now little-used. Mainly, this is because the availability ofcalculator s andcomputer s has removed the need for trigonometric tables of specialized functions such as this one.A related function is the excosecant (excsc), the exsecant of the complementary angle:
:
The reason to define a special function for the exsecant is similar to the rationale for the
versine : for smallangle s θ, the sec(θ) function approaches one, and so using the above formula for the exsecant will involve thesubtraction of two nearly equal quantities and exacerbate roundoff errors. Thus, a table of the secant function would need a very high accuracy to be used for the exsecant, making a specialized exsecant table useful. Even with a computer,floating point errors can be problematic for exsecants of small angles. A more accurate formula in this limit would be to use the identity::.
Prior to the availability of computers, this would require time-consuming multiplications.
The name "exsecant" can be understood from a graphical construction, at right, of the various trigonometric functions from a
unit circle , such as was used historically. sec(θ) is the secant , and the exsecant is the portion of this secant that lies "exterior" to the circle ("ex" isLatin for "out of").ee also
* Trigonometric identities
* Versine and HaversineReferences
* M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, eds., "Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables" (Dover: New York, 1972), p. 78. (See
Abramowitz and Stegun .)
* James B. Calvert, [http://www.du.edu/~jcalvert/math/trig.htm Trigonometry] (2004). Retrieved25 December 2004 .
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