Let t=anheta. The given equation is:
θ=tan−1(2t)−21sin−1(9+t26t)
We can rewrite the term inside sin−1 as:
9+t26t=1+(3t)22(3t)
Using the property sin−11+x22x=2tan−1x for ∣x∣≤1, and since tanθ range implies t can be any real number, we first check ∣3t∣≤1.
For ∣t∣≤3, the equation becomes:
θ=tan−1(2t)−21(2tan−1(t/3))=tan−1(2t)−tan−1(t/3)
Taking tan on both sides:
tanθ=tan(tan−1(2t)−tan−1(t/3))
t=1+(2t)(t/3)2t−t/3=1+2t2/35t/3=3+2t25t
t(3+2t2)=5t⇒t(3+2t2−5)=0⇒t(2t2−2)=0
This gives t=0,1,−1.
All these values satisfy ∣t∣≤3.
- If t=0,tanθ=0⇒θ=0.
- If t=1,tanθ=1⇒θ=π/4.
- If t=−1,tanθ=−1⇒θ=−π/4.
If ∣t∣>3, the formula for sin−1 changes, leading to no real solutions (as shown by −cotθ=3−2t27t). Thus, there are 3 real solutions.