Coth

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The hyperbolic cotangent is defined by $$\mathrm{coth}(z)=\dfrac{1}{\tanh(z)},$$ where $\tanh$ denotes the hyperbolic tangent function.

Properties

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\dfrac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}z} \mathrm{coth}(z) = -\mathrm{csch}^2(z),$$ where $\mathrm{coth}$ denotes the hyperbolic cotangent and $\mathrm{csch}$ denotes the hyperbolic cosecant.

Proof

By the definition, $$\mathrm{coth}(z) = \dfrac{\mathrm{cosh}(z)}{\mathrm{sinh}(z)}.$$ Using the quotient rule, the derivative of sinh, the derivative of cosh, Pythagorean identity for sinh and cosh, and the definition of $\mathrm{csch}$, we see $$\begin{array}{ll} \dfrac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}z} \mathrm{coth}(z) &= \dfrac{\sinh^2(z)-\cosh^2(z)}{\mathrm{sinh}^2(z)} \\ &= - \dfrac{\mathrm{cosh}^2(z)-\mathrm{sinh}^2(z)}{\mathrm{sinh}^2(z)} \\ &= -\mathrm{csch}^2(z), \end{array}$$ as was to be shown.

References

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\displaystyle\int \mathrm{coth}(z) \mathrm{d}z=\log(\sinh(z)) + C,$$ for arbitrary constant $C$, where $\mathrm{coth}$ denotes the hyperbolic cotangent, $\log$ denotes the logarithm, and $\sinh$ denotes the hyperbolic sine.

Proof

By definition, $$\mathrm{coth}(z) = \dfrac{\mathrm{cosh}(z)}{\mathrm{sinh}(z)}.$$ Let $u=\mathrm{sinh}(z)$ and use the derivative of sinh, u-substitution, and the definition of the logarithm to derive $$\begin{array}{ll} \displaystyle\int \mathrm{coth}(z) \mathrm{d}z &= \displaystyle\int \dfrac{1}{u} \mathrm{d} u \\ &= \log \left( \mathrm{sinh}(z) \right) + C, \end{array}$$ as was to be shown. █

References

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\coth(z)=i\cot(iz),$$ where $\coth$ denotes the hyperbolic cotangent and $\cot$ denotes the cotangent.

Proof

References

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\cot(z)=i\coth(iz),$$ where $\cot$ denotes the cotangent and $\coth$ denotes the hyperbolic cotangent.

Proof

References

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\csc(\mathrm{gd}(x))=\mathrm{coth}(x),$$ where $\csc$ is the cosecant, $\mathrm{gd}$ is the Gudermannian, and $\mathrm{coth}$ is the hyperbolic cotangent.

Proof

References

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\mathrm{coth}(\mathrm{gd}^{-1}(x))=\csc(x),$$ where $\mathrm{coth}$ is the hyperbolic cotangent, $\mathrm{gd}^{-1}$ is the inverse Gudermannian, and $\csc$ is the cosecant.

Proof

References

See Also

Arccoth

<center>Hyperbolic trigonometric functions
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