$asinh
Returns the inverse hyperbolic sine (hyperbolic arc sine) of a value.
$asinh
has the following syntax:{ $asinh: <expression> } $asinh
takes any valid expression that resolves to a number.$asinh
returns values in radians. Use$radiansToDegrees
operator to convert the output value from radians to degrees.By default
$asinh
returns values as adouble
.$asinh
can also return values as a 128-bit decimal as long as the<expression>
resolves to a 128-bit decimal value.For more information on expressions, see Expressions.
Behavior
null
, NaN
, and +/- Infinity
If the argument resolves to a value of null
or refers to a field that is missing, $asinh
returns null
. If the argument resolves to NaN
, $asinh
returns NaN
. If the argument resolves to negative or positive infinity, $asinh
returns negative or positive infinity respectively.
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Example
The trigonometry
collection contains a document that stores a value along the x
axis of a 2-D graph:
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5c50782193f833234ba90d85"), "x-coordinate" : Decimal128("1") }
The following aggregation operation uses the $asinh
expression to calculate inverse hyperbolic sine of x-coordinate
and add it to the input document using the $addFields
pipeline stage.
db.trigonometry.aggregate([ { $addFields : { "y-coordinate" : { $radiansToDegrees : { $asinh : "$x-coordinate" } } } } ])
The $radiansToDegrees
expression converts the radian value returned by $asinh
to the equivalent value in degrees.
The command returns the following output:
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5c50782193f833234ba90d85"), "x-coordinate" : Decimal128("1"), "y-coordinate" : Decimal128("50.49898671052621144221476300417157") }
Since x-coordinate
is stored as a 128-bit decimal, the output of $asinh
is a 128-bit decimal.
The trigonometry
collection contains a document that stores a value along the x
axis of a 2-D graph:
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5c50782193f833234ba90d85"), "x-coordinate" : Decimal128("1") }
The following aggregation operation uses the $asinh
expression to calculate inverse hyperbolic sine of x-coordinate
and add it to the input document using the $addFields
pipeline stage.
db.trigonometry.aggregate([ { $addFields : { "y-coordinate" : { $asinh : "$x-coordinate" } } } ])
The command returns the following output:
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5c50782193f833234ba90d85"), "x-coordinate" : Decimal128("1"), "y-coordinate" : Decimal128("1.818446459232066823483698963560709") }
Since x-coordinate
is stored as a 128-bit decimal, the output of $asinh
is a 128-bit decimal.