Prove the identity:

sec^4x - tan^4x = 1+2tan^2x

Steps r not clear

Steps r not clear

To prove the identity: sec^4x - tan^4x = 1 + 2tan^2x, we can start with the left-hand side (LHS) of the equation and manipulate it until it matches the right-hand side (RHS) of the equation:

LHS: sec^4x - tan^4x

Step 1: Convert sec^2x to tan^2x using the identity: sec^2x = 1 + tan^2x

Replacing sec^2x in LHS:
= (1 + tan^2x)^2 - tan^4x

Step 2: Expand the squared expression using the binomial expansion formula (a + b)^2 = a^2 + 2ab + b^2:

= (1 + 2tan^2x + tan^4x) - tan^4x

Step 3: Simplify the expression by canceling out the like terms (tan^4x - tan^4x):

= 1 + 2tan^2x

Now we have the RHS, which proves that sec^4x - tan^4x is equal to 1 + 2tan^2x.

Therefore, the identity has been proven.

From left side:

sec^4x - tan^4x

factors into:

(sec(x)+tan(x))*(sec(x)-tan(x))*(sec^2(x) + tan^2(x))

(sec(x)+tan(x))*(sec(x)-tan(x)) =sec^2x - tan^2x

and from trig identity:
sec^2x - tan^2x = 1

left side:
1*(sec^2(x) + tan^2(x))

Right side:

1+2tan^2(x)

from the trig identity:
sec^2x - tan^2x = 1

sec^2x - tan^2x + 2tan^2x = 1+2tan^2x

simp lying this:

sec^2x + tan^2x

So right side now matches left side.