International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences
Volume 2003 (2003), Issue 8, Pages 475-500
doi:10.1155/S0161171203106230

The combinatorial structure of trigonometry

Adel F. Antippa

Département de Physique, Université du Québec à Trois-Riviéres, Trois-Riviéres, Québec G9A 5H7, Canada

Received 28 June 2001; Revised 6 January 2002

Copyright © 2003 Adel F. Antippa. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Abstract

The native mathematical language of trigonometry is combinatorial. Two interrelated combinatorial symmetric functions underlie trigonometry. We use their characteristics to derive identities for the trigonometric functions of multiple distinct angles. When applied to the sum of an infinite number of infinitesimal angles, these identities lead to the power series expansions of the trigonometric functions. When applied to the interior angles of a polygon, they lead to two general constraints satisfied by the corresponding tangents. In the case of multiple equal angles, they reduce to the Bernoulli identities. For the case of two distinct angles, they reduce to the Ptolemy identity. They can also be used to derive the De Moivre-Cotes identity. The above results combined provide an appropriate mathematical combinatorial language and formalism for trigonometry and more generally polygonometry. This latter is the structural language of molecular organization, and is omnipresent in the natural phenomena of molecular physics, chemistry, and biology. Polygonometry is as important in the study of moderately complex structures, as trigonometry has historically been in the study of simple structures.