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Harder MX1 (1 Viewer)

J-Wang

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I have just proven that
The question then asks me to prove by induction that
Can someone please show me how to do this? I keep getting to a certain point and not knowing where to go from there.

Thanks in advance
 

seanieg89

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Will scan and upload a solution in a sec.
 

J-Wang

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it says that i have proven that {[sin(3x)/2]-[sinx/2]}/2sinx/2 = cosx

i then have to prove by induction that cosx+cos2x+cos3x+...cosnx={[sin(2n+1)/2]x/2sinx/2 - 1/2
have any ideas?
 

Riproot

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Ohhhh… I'll grab some a pen and paper and brb.
 

seanieg89

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It will work just the same, the expressions involved will just be marginally messier. You could literally copy the same proof and replace every instance of 'k' with 'k+1'.
 

seanieg89

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Actually, I did that work in a bit of a rush and made a minor mistake in my layout. We are assuming that the identity holds for n-1, and then proving that it holds for n. We are NOT assuming that it holds for n=k-1 and proving that it holds for n=k.
 

2ndt0m3h

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how did you prove the first result lol we haven't taken harder 3 unit and it looks so easy yet im not getting the answer.
 

seanieg89

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btw I like your sigmas.
Haha cheers, I know you have high standards in that regard. Yeah the series is just the real part of a complex geometric series, so it is very quick to evaluate without induction.
 

Fus Ro Dah

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I had a rather different proof in mind involving a Telescoping Sum because we're finding a Trigonometric Sum with the 'angles' (is that what you call it?) in A.P.

EDIT: Never mind I just saw they asked us to prove it via Induction.
Using the Sums/Products and Products/Sums expression I presume?
 

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