Sum-to-Product and Product-to-Sum Formulas

Learning Objectives

In this section, you will:

  • Express products as sums.
  • Express sums as products.
Photo of the UCLA marching band.

Figure 1. The UCLA marching band (credit: Eric Chan, Flickr).

A band marches down the field creating an amazing sound that bolsters the crowd. That sound travels as a wave that can be interpreted using trigonometric functions. For example, (Figure) represents a sound wave for the musical note A. In this section, we will investigate trigonometric identities that are the foundation of everyday phenomena such as sound waves.

Graph of a sound wave for the musical note A - it is a periodic function much like sin and cos - from 0 to .01

Figure 2.

Expressing Products as Sums

We have already learned a number of formulas useful for expanding or simplifying trigonometric expressions, but sometimes we may need to express the product of cosine and sine as a sum. We can use the product-to-sum formulas, which express products of trigonometric functions as sums. Let’s investigate the cosine identity first and then the sine identity.

Expressing Products as Sums for Cosine

We can derive the product-to-sum formula from the sum and difference identities for cosine. If we add the two equations, we get:

cosαcosβ+sinαsinβ=cos(αβ)+cosαcosβsinαsinβ=cos(α+β)__________________________________2cosαcosβ=cos(αβ)+cos(α+β)

Then, we divide by2to isolate the product of cosines:

cosαcosβ=12[cos(αβ)+cos(α+β)]

How To

Given a product of cosines, express as a sum.

  1. Write the formula for the product of cosines.
  2. Substitute the given angles into the formula.
  3. Simplify.

Writing the Product as a Sum Using the Product-to-Sum Formula for Cosine

Write the following product of cosines as a sum:2cos(7x2)cos3x2.

Try It

Use the product-to-sum formula to write the product as a sum or difference:cos(2θ)cos(4θ).

Expressing the Product of Sine and Cosine as a Sum

Next, we will derive the product-to-sum formula for sine and cosine from the sum and difference formulas for sine. If we add the sum and difference identities, we get:

 sin(α+β)=sinαcosβ+cosαsinβ+sin(αβ)=sinαcosβcosαsinβ________________________________________sin(α+β)+sin(αβ)=2sinαcosβ

Then, we divide by 2 to isolate the product of cosine and sine:

sinαcosβ=12[sin(α+β)+sin(αβ)]

Writing the Product as a Sum Containing only Sine or Cosine

Express the following product as a sum containing only sine or cosine and no products:sin(4θ)cos(2θ).

Try It

Use the product-to-sum formula to write the product as a sum:sin(x+y)cos(xy).

Expressing Products of Sines in Terms of Cosine

Expressing the product of sines in terms of cosine is also derived from the sum and difference identities for cosine. In this case, we will first subtract the two cosine formulas:

 cos(αβ)=cosαcosβ+sinαsinβ cos(α+β)=(cosαcosβsinαsinβ)___________________________________________________cos(αβ)cos(α+β)=2sinαsinβ

Then, we divide by 2 to isolate the product of sines:

sinαsinβ=12[cos(αβ)cos(α+β)]

Similarly we could express the product of cosines in terms of sine or derive other product-to-sum formulas.

The Product-to-Sum Formulas

The product-to-sum formulas are as follows:

cosαcosβ=12[cos(αβ)+cos(α+β)]
sinαcosβ=12[sin(α+β)+sin(αβ)]
sinαsinβ=12[cos(αβ)cos(α+β)]
cosαsinβ=12[sin(α+β)sin(αβ)]

Express the Product as a Sum or Difference

Writecos(3θ)cos(5θ)as a sum or difference.

Try It

Use the product-to-sum formula to evaluatecos11π12cosπ12.

Expressing Sums as Products

Some problems require the reverse of the process we just used. The sum-to-product formulas allow us to express sums of sine or cosine as products. These formulas can be derived from the product-to-sum identities. For example, with a few substitutions, we can derive the sum-to-product identity for sine. Letu+v2=αanduv2=β.

Then,

α+β=u+v2+uv2=2u2=uαβ=u+v2uv2=2v2=v

Thus, replacingαandβin the product-to-sum formula with the substitute expressions, we have

sinαcosβ=12[sin(α+β)+sin(αβ)]sin(u+v2)cos(uv2)=12[sinu+sinv]Substitute for(α+β) and (αβ)2sin(u+v2)cos(uv2)=sinu+sinv

The other sum-to-product identities are derived similarly.

Sum-to-Product Formulas

The sum-to-product formulas are as follows:

sinα+sinβ=2sin(α+β2)cos(αβ2)
sinαsinβ=2sin(αβ2)cos(α+β2)
cosαcosβ=2sin(α+β2)sin(αβ2)
cosα+cosβ=2cos(α+β2)cos(αβ2)

Writing the Difference of Sines as a Product

Write the following difference of sines expression as a product:sin(4θ)sin(2θ).

Try It

Use the sum-to-product formula to write the sum as a product:sin(3θ)+sin(θ).

Evaluating Using the Sum-to-Product Formula

Evaluatecos(15°)cos(75°).Check the answer with a graphing calculator.

Proving an Identity

Prove the identity:

cos(4t)cos(2t)sin(4t)+sin(2t)=tant

Analysis

Recall that verifying trigonometric identities has its own set of rules. The procedures for solving an equation are not the same as the procedures for verifying an identity. When we prove an identity, we pick one side to work on and make substitutions until that side is transformed into the other side.

Verifying the Identity Using Double-Angle Formulas and Reciprocal Identities

Verify the identitycsc2θ2=cos(2θ)sin2θ.

Try It

Verify the identitytanθcotθcos2θ=sin2θ.

Access these online resources for additional instruction and practice with the product-to-sum and sum-to-product identities.

Key Equations

Product-to-sum Formulas cosαcosβ=12[cos(αβ)+cos(α+β)]sinαcosβ=12[sin(α+β)+sin(αβ)]sinαsinβ=12[cos(αβ)cos(α+β)]cosαsinβ=12[sin(α+β)sin(αβ)]
Sum-to-product Formulas sinα+sinβ=2sin(α+β2)cos(αβ2)sinαsinβ=2sin(αβ2)cos(α+β2)cosαcosβ=2sin(α+β2)sin(αβ2)cosα+cosβ=2cos(α+β2)cos(αβ2)

Key Concepts

  • From the sum and difference identities, we can derive the product-to-sum formulas and the sum-to-product formulas for sine and cosine.
  • We can use the product-to-sum formulas to rewrite products of sines, products of cosines, and products of sine and cosine as sums or differences of sines and cosines. See (Figure), (Figure), and (Figure).
  • We can also derive the sum-to-product identities from the product-to-sum identities using substitution.
  • We can use the sum-to-product formulas to rewrite sum or difference of sines, cosines, or products sine and cosine as products of sines and cosines. See (Figure).
  • Trigonometric expressions are often simpler to evaluate using the formulas. See (Figure).
  • The identities can be verified using other formulas or by converting the expressions to sines and cosines. To verify an identity, we choose the more complicated side of the equals sign and rewrite it until it is transformed into the other side. See (Figure) and (Figure).

Section Exercises

Verbal

Starting with the product to sum formulasinαcosβ=12[sin(α+β)+sin(αβ)],explain how to determine the formula forcosαsinβ.

Provide two different methods of calculatingcos(195°)cos(105°),one of which uses the product to sum. Which method is easier?

Describe a situation where we would convert an equation from a sum to a product and give an example.

Describe a situation where we would convert an equation from a product to a sum, and give an example.

Algebraic

For the following exercises, rewrite the product as a sum or difference.

16sin(16x)sin(11x)

20cos(36t)cos(6t)

2sin(5x)cos(3x)

10cos(5x)sin(10x)

sin(x)sin(5x)

sin(3x)cos(5x)

For the following exercises, rewrite the sum or difference as a product.

cos(6t)+cos(4t)

sin(3x)+sin(7x)

cos(7x)+cos(7x)

sin(3x)sin(3x)

cos(3x)+cos(9x)

sinhsin(3h)

For the following exercises, evaluate the product for the following using a sum or difference of two functions. Evaluate exactly.

cos(45°)cos(15°)

cos(45°)sin(15°)

sin(345°)sin(15°)

sin(195°)cos(15°)

sin(45°)sin(15°)

For the following exercises, evaluate the product using a sum or difference of two functions. Leave in terms of sine and cosine.

cos(23°)sin(17°)

2sin(100°)sin(20°)

2sin(100°)sin(20°)

sin(213°)cos(8°)

2cos(56°)cos(47°)

For the following exercises, rewrite the sum as a product of two functions. Leave in terms of sine and cosine.

sin(76°)+sin(14°)

cos(58°)cos(12°)

sin(101°)sin(32°)

cos(100°)+cos(200°)

sin(1°)+sin(2°)

For the following exercises, prove the identity.

cos(a+b)cos(ab)=1tanatanb1+tanatanb

4sin(3x)cos(4x)=2sin(7x)2sinx

6cos(8x)sin(2x)sin(6x)=3sin(10x)csc(6x)+3

sinx+sin(3x)=4sinxcos2x

2(cos3xcosxsin2x)=cos(3x)+cosx

2tanxcos(3x)=secx(sin(4x)sin(2x))

cos(a+b)+cos(ab)=2cosacosb

Numeric

For the following exercises, rewrite the sum as a product of two functions or the product as a sum of two functions. Give your answer in terms of sines and cosines. Then evaluate the final answer numerically, rounded to four decimal places.

cos(58°)+cos(12°)

sin(2°)sin(3°)

cos(44°)cos(22°)

cos(176°)sin(9°)

sin(14°)sin(85°)

Technology

For the following exercises, algebraically determine whether each of the given equation is an identity. If it is not an identity, replace the right-hand side with an expression equivalent to the left side. Verify the results by graphing both expressions on a calculator.

2sin(2x)sin(3x)=cosxcos(5x)

cos(10θ)+cos(6θ)cos(6θ)cos(10θ)=cot(2θ)cot(8θ)

sin(3x)sin(5x)cos(3x)+cos(5x)=tanx

2cos(2x)cosx+sin(2x)sinx=2sinx

sin(2x)+sin(4x)sin(2x)sin(4x)=tan(3x)cotx

For the following exercises, simplify the expression to one term, then graph the original function and your simplified version to verify they are identical.

sin(9t)sin(3t)cos(9t)+cos(3t)

2sin(8x)cos(6x)sin(2x)

sin(3x)sinxsinx

cos(5x)+cos(3x)sin(5x)+sin(3x)

sinxcos(15x)cosxsin(15x)

Extensions

For the following exercises, prove the following sum-to-product formulas.

sinxsiny=2sin(xy2)cos(x+y2)

cosx+cosy=2cos(x+y2)cos(xy2)

For the following exercises, prove the identity.

sin(6x)+sin(4x)sin(6x)sin(4x)=tan(5x)cotx

cos(3x)+cosxcos(3x)cosx=cot(2x)cotx

cos(6y)+cos(8y)sin(6y)sin(4y)=cotycos(7y)sec(5y)

cos(2y)cos(4y)sin(2y)+sin(4y)=tany

sin(10x)sin(2x)cos(10x)+cos(2x)=tan(4x)

cosxcos(3x)=4sin2xcosx

(cos(2x)cos(4x))2+(sin(4x)+sin(2x))2=4sin2(3x)

tan(π4t)=1tant1+tant

Glossary

product-to-sum formula
a trigonometric identity that allows the writing of a product of trigonometric functions as a sum or difference of trigonometric functions
sum-to-product formula
a trigonometric identity that allows, by using substitution, the writing of a sum of trigonometric functions as a product of trigonometric functions