hyperbolic tangent vs tangent

$\begingroup$

The tangent of an angle is the ratio of the length of the opposite side to the length of the adjacent side (in a right triangle). Is there a similar definition for the hyperbolic tangent?

The reason I ask this question is to get a geometrical intuition of the notion of rapidity in relativity: $$\phi = \mbox{tanh}^{-1}(v/c)$$

$\endgroup$ 8

1 Answer

$\begingroup$

(just comments transfered to answer) s

$ \phi$ cannot be represented by an angle.

if only because it has a range $ − \infty < \phi < \infty $ , while angles have a range $ − \pi < x < \pi $ )

$ \phi$ can be represented by an area
see and .

$ \phi$ is twice the area between:

  • the x-axis,
  • the line conecting the origin and the point (1,tanh) and
  • the hyperbola,

I agree it is all not very intuitive, but then you could also see the normal trigonomic functions as functions of the area of the enclosed circle sector instead as function of the arc length.

$\endgroup$

Your Answer

Sign up or log in

Sign up using Google Sign up using Facebook Sign up using Email and Password

Post as a guest

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

You Might Also Like