Enter a problem...
Trigonometry Examples
Step 1
Step 1.1
Finding the LCD of a list of values is the same as finding the LCM of the denominators of those values.
Step 1.2
Since contains both numbers and variables, there are two steps to find the LCM. Find LCM for the numeric part then find LCM for the variable part .
Step 1.3
The LCM is the smallest positive number that all of the numbers divide into evenly.
1. List the prime factors of each number.
2. Multiply each factor the greatest number of times it occurs in either number.
Step 1.4
The number is not a prime number because it only has one positive factor, which is itself.
Not prime
Step 1.5
The LCM of is the result of multiplying all prime factors the greatest number of times they occur in either number.
Step 1.6
The factor for is itself.
occurs time.
Step 1.7
The factors for are , which is multiplied by each other times.
occurs times.
Step 1.8
The LCM of is the result of multiplying all prime factors the greatest number of times they occur in either term.
Step 1.9
Multiply by .
Step 2
Step 2.1
Multiply each term in by .
Step 2.2
Simplify the left side.
Step 2.2.1
Simplify each term.
Step 2.2.1.1
Cancel the common factor of .
Step 2.2.1.1.1
Move the leading negative in into the numerator.
Step 2.2.1.1.2
Factor out of .
Step 2.2.1.1.3
Cancel the common factor.
Step 2.2.1.1.4
Rewrite the expression.
Step 2.2.1.2
Cancel the common factor of .
Step 2.2.1.2.1
Cancel the common factor.
Step 2.2.1.2.2
Rewrite the expression.
Step 2.3
Simplify the right side.
Step 2.3.1
Multiply by .
Step 3
Step 3.1
Factor by grouping.
Step 3.1.1
For a polynomial of the form , rewrite the middle term as a sum of two terms whose product is and whose sum is .
Step 3.1.1.1
Factor out of .
Step 3.1.1.2
Rewrite as plus
Step 3.1.1.3
Apply the distributive property.
Step 3.1.2
Factor out the greatest common factor from each group.
Step 3.1.2.1
Group the first two terms and the last two terms.
Step 3.1.2.2
Factor out the greatest common factor (GCF) from each group.
Step 3.1.3
Factor the polynomial by factoring out the greatest common factor, .
Step 3.2
If any individual factor on the left side of the equation is equal to , the entire expression will be equal to .
Step 3.3
Set equal to and solve for .
Step 3.3.1
Set equal to .
Step 3.3.2
Solve for .
Step 3.3.2.1
Add to both sides of the equation.
Step 3.3.2.2
Divide each term in by and simplify.
Step 3.3.2.2.1
Divide each term in by .
Step 3.3.2.2.2
Simplify the left side.
Step 3.3.2.2.2.1
Cancel the common factor of .
Step 3.3.2.2.2.1.1
Cancel the common factor.
Step 3.3.2.2.2.1.2
Divide by .
Step 3.4
Set equal to and solve for .
Step 3.4.1
Set equal to .
Step 3.4.2
Add to both sides of the equation.
Step 3.5
The final solution is all the values that make true.
Step 4
The result can be shown in multiple forms.
Exact Form:
Decimal Form: