Maths Formulas All
Maths Formulas All
Maths Formulas All
The chapter explains the concept of sets along with their representation. The topics
discussed are empty sets, equal sets, subsets, finite and infinite sets, power sets, and
universal sets. A set is a well-collaborated collection of objects. A set consisting of
definite elements is a finite set. Otherwise, it is an infinite set. Below are the
important terms and properties used in Sets are listed as:
The union of two sets A and B are said to be contained elements that are
either in set A and set B. The union of A and B is denoted as, A∪B.
The intersection of two sets A and B are said to be contained elements
that are common in both sets. The intersection of A and B is denoted
as, A∩B.
The complement of a set A is the set of all elements given in the universal
set U that are not contained in A. The complement of A is denoted as, A’.
For any two sets A and B, the following holds true:(DE
Morgan’s Theorem)
(A∪B)′=A′∩B′
(A∩B)′=A′∪B′
If the finite sets A and B are given such that, (A∩B)=ϕ, then:
n(A∪B)=n(A)+n(B)
If (A∪B)=ϕ, then:
n(A∪B)=n(A)+n(B)−n(A∩B)
Some other important formulas of Sets for any three sets A, B, and C are
as follows:
1. A – A = Ø
2. B – A = B⋂ A’
3. B – A = B – (A⋂B)
4. (A – B) = A if A⋂B = Ø
5. (A – B) ⋂ C = (A⋂ C) – (B⋂C)
6. A ΔB = (A-B) U (B- A)
7. n(A∪B) = n(A) + n(B) – n(A⋂B)
8. n(A∪B∪C)= n(A) +n(B) + n(C) – n(B⋂C) – n (A⋂ B)- n (A⋂C)
+ n(A⋂B⋂C)
9. n(A – B) = n(A∪B) – n(B)
10. n(A – B) = n(A) – n(A⋂B)
11. n(A’) = n(∪) – n(A)
12. n(U) = n(A) + n(B) + – n(A⋂B) + n((A∪B)’)
13. n((A∪B)’) = n(U) + n(A⋂B) – n(A) – n(B)
Chapter 2: Relations & Functions
The chapter Relations & Functions explains the advanced concepts of sets theory
using the concept of ordered and unordered pairs of elements. An ordered pair is a
pair of elements grouped together in a certain order. A relation R towards a set A to
a set B can be described as a subset of the cartesian product A × B which is obtained
by describing a relationship between the first of its element x and the second of its
element y given in the ordered pairs of A × B.
The below-mentioned properties will surely assist students to solve various maths
problems:
Relations: A relation R is the subset of the cartesian product of A × B,
where A and B are two non-empty elements. It is derived by stating the
relationship between the first element and second element of the ordered
pair of A × B.
Inverse of Relation: A and B are any two non-empty sets. Let R be a
relationship between two sets A and B. The inverse of relation R,
indicated as R-1, is a relationship that connects B and A and is defined by
R-1 ={(b, a) : (a, b) ∈ R}
where, Domain of R = Range of R-1 and Range of R = Domain of R-1.
Functions: A relation f from a set A to set B is said to be function, if every
element of set A has one and only image in set B.
A cartesian product A × B of two sets A and B is given by: A × B = { (a,b)
: a ϵ A, b ϵ B}
If (a, b) = (x, y); then a = x and b = y
If n(A) = x and n(B) = y, then n(A × B) = xy and A × ϕϕ = ϕϕ
The cartesian product: A × B ≠ B × A.
A function f from set A to set B considers a specific relation type where
every element x in set A has one and only one image in set B. A function
can be denoted as f : A → B, where f(x) = y.
Algebra of functions: If the function f : X → R and g : X → R; we have:
(f + g)(x) = f(x) + g(x) ; x ϵ X
(f – g)(x) = f(x) – g(x)
(f . g)(x) = f(x).g(x)
(kf)(x) = k(f(x)) where k is a real number
{f/g}(x) = f(x)/g(x), g(x)≠0
Chapter 3: Trigonometric Functions
In Mathematics, trigonometric functions are the real functions that relate to an angle
of a right-angled triangle forming some finite ratios of two side lengths. Find the
important Maths formulas for Class 11 related to trigonometric functions below.
If in a circle of radius r, an arc of length l subtends an angle of θ radians,
then l = r×θ.
Radian Measure = π/180 × Degree Measure
Degree Measure = 180/π × Radian Measure
Trigonometric ratios:
sin θ = (Perpendicular (P)) / (Hypotenuse (H)).
cos θ = (Base (B)) / ( Hypotenuse (H)).
tan θ = (Perpendicular (P)) / (Base (B)).
cosec θ = (Hypotenuse (H)) / (Perpendicular (P)).
sec θ = (Hypotenuse (H)) / (Base (B)).
cot θ = (Base (B)) / (Perpendicular (P)).
Reciprocal Trigonometric Ratios:
sin θ = 1 / (cosec θ)
cosec θ = 1 / (sin θ)
cos θ = 1 / (sec θ)
sec θ = 1 / (cos θ)
tan θ = 1 / (cot θ)
cot θ = 1 / (tan θ)
Trigonometric Ratios of Complementary Angles:
sin (90° – θ) = cos θ
cos (90° – θ) = sin θ
tan (90° – θ) = cot θ
cot (90° – θ) = tan θ
sec (90° – θ) = cosec θ
cosec (90° – θ) = sec θ
Periodic Trigonometric Ratios
sin(π/2-θ) = cos θ
cos(π/2-θ) = sin θ
sin(π-θ) = sin θ
cos(π-θ) = -cos θ
sin(π+θ)=-sin θ
cos(π+θ)=-cos θ
sin(2π-θ) = -sin θ
cos(2π-θ) = cos θ
Trigonometric Identities
sin2 θ + cos2 θ = 1 ⇒ sin2 θ = 1 – cos2 θ ⇒ cos2 θ = 1 – sin2 θ
cosec2 θ – cot2 θ = 1 ⇒ cosec2 θ = 1 + cot2 θ ⇒ cot2 θ =
cosec2 θ – 1
sec2 θ – tan2 θ = 1 ⇒ sec2 θ = 1 + tan2 θ ⇒ tan2 θ = sec2 θ – 1
Product to Sum Formulas
sin x sin y = 1/2 [cos(x–y) − cos(x+y)]
cos x cos y = 1/2[cos(x–y) + cos(x+y)]
sin x cos y = 1/2[sin(x+y) + sin(x−y)]
cos x sin y = 1/2[sin(x+y) – sin(x−y)]
Sum to Product Formulas
sin x + sin y = 2 sin [(x+y)/2] cos [(x-y)/2]
sin x – sin y = 2 cos [(x+y)/2] sin [(x-y)/2]
cos x + cos y = 2 cos [(x+y)/2] cos [(x-y)/2]
cos x – cos y = -2 sin [(x+y)/2] sin [(x-y)/2]
General Trigonometric Formulas:
sin (x+y) = sin x × cos y + cos x × sin y
cos(x+y)=cosx×cosy−sinx×siny
cos(x–y)=cosx×cosy+sinx×siny
sin(x–y)=sinx×cosy−cosx×siny
If there are no angles x, y and (x ± y) is an odd multiple of (π /
2); then:
tan (x+y) = tan x + tan y / 1 − tan x tan y
tan (x−y) = tan x − tan y / 1 + tan x tan y
If there are no angles x, y and (x ± y) is an odd multiple of π;
then:
cot (x+y) = cot x cot y−1 / cot y + cot x
cot (x−y) = cot x cot y+1 / cot y − cot x
Formulas for twice of the angles:
sin2θ = 2sinθ cosθ = [2tan θ /(1+tan2θ)]
cos2θ = cos2θ–sin2θ = 1–2sin2θ = 2cos2θ–1= [(1-
tan2θ)/(1+tan2θ)]
tan 2θ = (2 tan θ)/(1-tan2θ)
Formulas for thrice of the angles:
sin 3θ = 3sin θ – 4sin 3θ
cos 3θ = 4cos 3θ – 3cos θ
tan 3θ = [3tan θ–tan 3θ]/[1−3tan 2θ]
Chapter 4: Principle of Mathematical Induction
As the name suggests, the chapter explains the concept of the Principle of
Mathematical Induction . The topics discussed are the process to prove the induction
and motivating the application taking natural numbers as the least
inductive subset of real numbers. One key basis for mathematical thinking is
deductive reasoning. In contrast to deduction, inductive reasoning depends on
working with different cases and developing a conjecture by observing incidences
till we have observed each and every case. Thus, in simple language we can say the
word ‘induction’ means the generalisation from particular cases or facts.
Below mentioned is the list of some important terms and steps used in the chapter
mentioned above:
Statement: A sentence is called a statement if it is either true or false.
Motivation: Motivation is tending to initiate an action. Here Basis step
motivate us for mathematical induction.
Principle of Mathematical Induction: The principle of mathematical
induction is one such tool that can be used to prove a wide variety of
mathematical statements. Each such statement is assumed as P(n)
associated with positive integer n, for which the correctness for the case n
= 1 is examined. Then assuming the truth of P(k) for some positive integer
k, the truth of P (k+1) is established.
Working Rule:
Step 1: Show that the given statement is true for n = 1.
Step 2: Assume that the statement is true for n = k.
Step 3: Using the assumption made in step 2, show that the
statement is true for n = k + 1. We have proved the statement is
true for n = k. According to step 3, it is also true for k + 1 (i.e.,
1 + 1 = 2). By repeating the above logic, it is true for every
natural number.
Chapter 5: Complex Numbers and Quadratic Equations
As the name of the chapter suggests, therefore, this chapter explains the concept
of complex numbers and quadratic equations and their properties . The topics
discussed are the square root, algebraic properties, argand plane and polar
representation of complex numbers , solutions of quadratic equations in the complex
number system. A few important points related to the Complex Numbers and
Quadratic Equations are as follows:
Complex Numbers: A number that can be expressed in the form a + b is
known as the complex number; where a and b are the real numbers and i
is the imaginary part of the complex number.
Imaginary Numbers: The square root of a negative real number is called
an imaginary number, e.g. √-2, √-5 etc. The quantity √-1 is an imaginary
unit and it is denoted by ‘i’ called iota.
i = √-1, i2 = -1, i3 = -i, i4 = 1
Equality of Complex Number: Two complex numbers z1 = x1 + iy1 and
z2 = x2 + iy2 are equal, if x1 = x2 and y1 = y2 i.e. Re(z1) = Re(z2) and Im(z1)
= Im(z2)
Algebra of Complex Numbers
Addition: Consider z1 = x1 + iy1 and z2 = x2 + iy2 are any two complex
numbers, then their sum is defined as
z1 + z2 = (x1 + iy1) + (x2 + iy2) = (x1 + x2) + i (y1 + y2)
Subtraction: Consider z1 = (x1 + iy1) and z2 = (x2 + iy2) are any two
complex numbers, then their difference is defined as
z1 – z2 = (x1 + iy1) – (x2 + iy2) = (x1 – x2) + i(y1 – y2)
Multiplication: Consider z1 = (x1 + iy1) and z2 = (x2 + iy2) be any two
complex numbers, then their multiplication is defined as
z1z2 = (x1 + iy1) (x2 + iy2) = (x1x2 – y1y2) + i (x1y2 + x2y1)
Division: Consider z1 = x1 + iy1 and z2 = x2 + iy2 be any two complex
numbers, then their division is defined as
by:
The common difference is given as, d = (b – a)/(n + 1)
The Sum of n arithmetic mean between a and b is, n (a+b/2).
Geometric Progression (GP): A sequence in which the ratio of two
consecutive terms is constant is called geometric progression.
The constant ratio is called common ratio (r).
i.e. r = an+1/an, ∀ n>1
The general term or nth term of GP is an =arn-1
nth term of a GP from the end is a’n = 1/rn-1, l = last term
If a, b and c are three consecutive terms of a GP then b2 = ac.
Geometric Mean (GM): If a, G and b are in GR then G is called the
geometric mean of a and b and is given by G = √(ab).
If a,G1, G2, G3,….. Gn, b are in GP then G1, G2, G3,……Gn are in
GM’s between a and b, then
is: .
X-axis divides the line segment joining (x1, y1) and (x2, y2) in the
ratio -y1 : y2.
Y-axis divides the line segment joining (x1, y1) and (x2, y2) in the
ratio -x1 : x2.
Coordinates of Centroid of a Triangle with vertices (x1, y1), (x2, y2) and
(x3, y3) is
If the points (x1, y1), (x2, y2) and (x3, y3) are collinear, then x1 (y2 – y3) +
x2 (y3 – y1) + x3 (y1 – y2) = 0.
Slope or Gradient of Line: The inclination of angle θ to a line with a
positive direction of X-axis in the anti-clockwise direction, the tangent of
angle θ is said to be slope or gradient of the line and is denoted by m. i.e.
m = tan θ
The slope of a line passing through points P(x1, y1) and Q(x2, y2) is given
by,
Angle between Two Lines: The angle θ between two lines having slope
m1 and m2 is,
If two lines are parallel, their slopes are equal i.e. m1 = m2.
If two lines are perpendicular to each other, then their product
of slopes is -1 i.e. m1m2 = -1.
Point of intersection of two lines: Let equation of lines be ax1 + by1 +
c1 = 0 and a2x + b2y + c2 = 0, then their point of intersection is
Ellipse: An ellipse is the set of all points in the plane whose distances
from a fixed point in the plane bears a constant ratio, less than to their
distance from a fixed point in the plane. The fixed point is called focus, the
fixed line a directrix and the constant ratio (e) the eccentricity of the
ellipse. The two standard forms of ellipse with their terminologies are
mentioned below in the table:
Different forms of
x2/a2 + y2/b2= 1, a > b x2/b2 + y2/a2= 1, a > b
Ellipse
While, the distance between two points A(x, y, z) from the origin O(0, 0, 0)
is given by,
Section Formula: The coordinates of the point R which divides the line
segment joining two points P(x1, y1, z1) and Q(x2, y2, z2) internally or
externally in the ratio m : n are given by,
Coordinates of Centroid of a Triangle with vertices (x1, y1), (x2, y2) and
(x3, y3) is
it as .
Left Hand and Right-Hand Limits: If values of the function at the point
which are very near to a on the left tends to a definite unique number as x
tends to a, then the unique number so obtained is called the left-hand limit
of f(x) at x = a, we write it as
exists finitely.
Some Important Properties of Derivatives: Consider f and g be two
functions such that their derivatives can be defined in a common domain
as:
Some Standard Derivatives are given as:
Chapter 14: Mathematical Reasoning
As the name suggests, the chapter explains the concepts of mathematical reasoning
(a critical skill to analyze any given hypothesis in the context of mathematics). The
topics discussed are statements, inductive reasoning, and deductive reasoning.
Following are the list of important terms discussed as:
Statements: A statement is a sentence which either true or false, but not
both simultaneously. For example: “A triangle has four sides.”, “New
Delhi is the capital of India.” are the statements.
Negation of a statement: Negation of a statement p: If p denote a
statement, then the negation of p is denoted by ∼p.
Compound statement: A statement is a compound statement if it is made
up of two or more smaller statements. The smaller statements are called
component statements of the compound statement. The Compound
statements are made by:
Connectives: “AND”, “OR”
Quantifiers: “there exists”, “For every”
Implications: The meaning of implications “If ”, “only if ”, “ if
and only if ”.
“p ⇒ q” :
p is a sufficient condition for q or p implies q.
q is necessary to condition for p. The converse of a statement p
⇒ q is the statement q ⇒ p.
p⇒ q together with its converse gives p if and only if q.
“p ⇔ q”:
p implies q (denoted by p ⇒ q)
p is a sufficient condition for q
q is a necessary condition for p
p only if q
∼q implies ∼p
Contrapositive: The contrapositive of a statement p ⇒ q is the statement
∼ q ⇒∼p.
Contradiction: If to check whether p is true we assume negation p is true.
Validating statements: Checking of a statement whether it is true or false.
The validity of a statement depends upon which of the special. The
following methods are used to check the validity of statements:
direct method
contrapositive method
method of contradiction
using a counterexample.
Chapter 15: Statistics
This chapter explains the concepts of statistics (data collected for specific
purposes), dispersion, and methods of calculation for ungrouped and grouped data.
The topics discussed are range, mean deviation, variance and standard deviation ,
and analysis of frequency distributions . Here one will find the essential maths
formulas for Class 11 of Statistics given below:
Measure of Dispersion: The dispersion is the measure of variations in the
values of the variable. It measures the degree of scatteredness of the
observation in a distribution around the central value.
Range: The measure of dispersion which is easiest to understand and
easiest to calculate is the range. Range is defined as the difference
between two extreme observation of the distribution.
Range of distribution = Largest observation – Smallest observation.
Mean Deviation:
Mean deviation for ungrouped data- For n observations x1, x2, x3,…, xn, the mean
deviation about their mean x¯ is given by:
Variance: Variance is the arithmetic mean of the square of the deviation about
mean x¯.
Let x1, x2, ……xn be n observations with x¯ as the mean, then the variance denoted by
σ2, is given by