On Friday, September 20, 2024 at 12:47:13 AM UTC-6 Alan Grayson wrote:

On Wednesday, September 18, 2024 at 6:50:53 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:




On 9/18/2024 5:19 AM, John Clark wrote:



On Wed, Sep 18, 2024 at 8:12 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:



On Wednesday, September 18, 2024 at 5:40:42 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:

On Wed, Sep 18, 2024 at 1:16 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

*I'll get back to you on this. I was thinking, as x increases positively or 
negatively, the y values (angles) repeat multiple times, making the 
function many-to-one. In this case, we're mapping all the real numbers, to 
a subset of the y-axis. Am I mistaken? AG *


*Arctan(1) = the angle whose tangent = 1. Isn't this angle 90 deg or pi/2?  
So your plot seems wrong, but it's what is on the Internet. AG *


*That's wrong. Arctan(1) = pi/4, which is what the plot indicates. But I 
still think the plot keeps repeating as x increases or decreases. AG*

[image: image.png]


*1) **The range of the Arctangent function is the interval (-π/2,π/2) and 
its range is all the real numbers.*

* 2) By dividing by π,  the range scales to (-1/2, 1/2).*

* 3) Adding 1/2 shifts the range to (0,1) *

*4) Thus for every real number x there is a unique number y between zero 
and one that corresponds to it, and that number is Y=1/2 + 1/π Arctan(x) . 
As I said before, the domain is all the real numbers and the range is (0,1)*
 


*> Yes, but initially you were seeking a 1-1 function, but this one is 
many-to-one. AG *

 FOR DARWIN'S SAKE! I GIVE UP!


Could'a told ya.

Brent 


*I spoke to a friend who is Emeritus Professor in Mathematics at Cal  Poly 
Pomona. He says the inverse tangent function is MULTI VALUED.  AG*

*Is the arctan periodic, or multi-valued? Internet answer:*

No, the arctangent (arctan) function is not periodic; it is considered a 
one-to-one function
* because its domain is restricted to an interval where the tangent 
function (which is periodic) is one-to-one, typically from -π/2 to π/2, 
ensuring that each output value corresponds to a unique input value. *
Explanation: 

   - Tangent periodicity:
   The tangent function (tan(x)) is periodic with a period of π, meaning 
   its values repeat every π radians. 
   - Restricting the domain:
   To create an inverse function (arctan), *we need to restrict the domain *of 
   the tangent function to an interval where it is not repeating, like (-π/2, 
   π/2). 
   

   - *By restricting the domain in this way, the arctangent function is no 
   longer periodic. *
   
*IOW, the arctan is single-valued if its domain is restricted to (**-π/2, 
π/2)*, but Clark defines its domain to all real numbers, making the arctan 
periodic and thus multi-valued. AG

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