Question 572966
Let's assume that theta equals 90 degrees. 
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If theta equals 90 degrees, then (1/2)*(theta) is equal to 45 degrees, and sin(45) is approximately 0.7071.
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Next, what is sin(theta) for theta = 90 degrees?. The answer to that is +1. This means that if theta equals 90 degrees, then:
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(1/2)* sin(theta) = (1/2)*(+1) = 1/2 = 0.5000
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Therefore, we can say that if theta equals 90 degrees then:
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sin((1/2)*theta) = 0.7071 and
1/2*sin(theta) = 0.5000 
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With this example, you can now say that it is not always true that:
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sin(1/2(theta))=1/2sin(theta)
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Hope this helps you to understand a way this problem can be answered and what the answer is.
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