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I am a high school student currently taking pre-calculus. We have just finished a unit on analytic trigonometry.

Are any purely theoretical uses for trigonometry? More specifically, can trigonometric concepts (or even functions) be used to prove/disprove general mathematical conjectures?

I have been told it is used a lot in calculus, but by my (extremely) limited knowledge it mainly consists of applying calculus concepts to trigonometric functions. Is this correct?

Conan G.
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    Trig functions are ubiquitous throughout all math calculus and above. Theory, applications, everything, very important to learn everything you can about trig functions if you plan to continue in math. – Merkh May 02 '16 at 00:13
  • I don't deny they're important, I'm just searching for more theoretical applications outside of what I hear in class. – Conan G. May 02 '16 at 00:15
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    "theoretical application" is kind of contradicting. – mvw May 02 '16 at 00:31
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    I meant applications to theoretical problems, such as proving theorems. – Conan G. May 02 '16 at 00:43
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    One theorem which can be proven using Fourier analysis (which is mentioned in an answer below) is the prime number theorem, which is important and non-trivial. The proof by Fourier analysis is not the standard proof, far as I know, but it astonishes me that sines and cosines could have anything to do with the distribution of prime numbers. – Milo Brandt May 02 '16 at 00:46
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    Another Fourier analysis proof is Hurwitz's proof of the isoperimetric inequality for rectifiable curves. So, from triangles comes a proof that circles enclose maximal area (of curves with given perimeter). – Eric Towers May 02 '16 at 12:31
  • As mvw wrote, "theoretical application" is kind of contradicting. You can find applications of trigonometry in 1- turbomachinery calculations, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velocity_triangle, 2- truss bridges calculations, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truss_bridge, 3- physics, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_decomposition, 4- calculation of electric motors, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct%E2%80%93quadrature%E2%80%93zero_transformation, .... – cgiovanardi May 02 '16 at 14:21
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    Theoretical when it was discovered, or theoretical now? Most math that was purely theoretical 200 years ago has found some real-world application since. – BlueRaja - Danny Pflughoeft May 02 '16 at 16:18
  • You can't disprove a theorem. – Robert Israel May 02 '16 at 17:57
  • @RobertIsrael Sure you can, right? Or maybe its axioms that can be disproved or something... – Simply Beautiful Art May 02 '16 at 23:57
  • It sure is amazing that trigonometry goes far beyond triangles, especially in subjects that seem to be completely off topic for triangles, like prime numbers and "Fourier analysis" and exponential functions... – Simply Beautiful Art May 02 '16 at 23:59
  • I Just finished to... are you in my class? – amanuel2 May 09 '16 at 01:26
  • Dsafds, I don't think so. I go to school in upstate NY.
  • – Conan G. May 09 '16 at 10:12