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Okay, to restate the problem... kinda just make it more forum-friendly here:
Let's say alpha = A, beta = B, and gamma = C... Theta = Q still as that's what everyone seems to be working with.
Now then... if A + B + C = 180 degrees,
cot(Q) = cot(A) + cot(B) + cot[C], (Had to use square brackets there because it rewrote [C] as  when I didn't use them)
0 < Q < 90 degrees (Q is in the first quadrant, meaning all trig values are positive),
Prove sin^3(Q) = sin(A - Q) * sin (B - Q) * sin (C - Q)
I don't know why I rewrote it, maybe it'll help someone though.
Some things that are common knowledge:
sin(A - Q) * sin (B - Q) * sin (C - Q) = sin(A - Q + B - Q + C - Q) = sin(A + B + C - 3Q)
sin^3(Q) = 3sin(Q) (I may be wrong on this one, someone correct me if I'm wrong)
Let's say alpha = A, beta = B, and gamma = C... Theta = Q still as that's what everyone seems to be working with.
Now then... if A + B + C = 180 degrees,
cot(Q) = cot(A) + cot(B) + cot[C], (Had to use square brackets there because it rewrote [C] as  when I didn't use them)
0 < Q < 90 degrees (Q is in the first quadrant, meaning all trig values are positive),
Prove sin^3(Q) = sin(A - Q) * sin (B - Q) * sin (C - Q)
I don't know why I rewrote it, maybe it'll help someone though.
Some things that are common knowledge:
sin(A - Q) * sin (B - Q) * sin (C - Q) = sin(A - Q + B - Q + C - Q) = sin(A + B + C - 3Q)
sin^3(Q) = 3sin(Q) (I may be wrong on this one, someone correct me if I'm wrong)








