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Binomial Theorem Question (1 Viewer)

nightweaver066

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I know i have to subtract one from the other, integrate and let x be a specific value but i can't seem to get the LHS part.

Would be great if someone could post a solution with working out.
 

apollo1

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I know i have to subtract one from the other, integrate and let x be a specific value but i can't seem to get the LHS part.

Would be great if someone could post a solution with working out.
i think the 2n-1 part is in there to indicate that when you subtract the two the terms remaining have odd powers.
 

nightweaver066

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i think the 2n-1 part is in there to indicate that when you subtract the two the terms remaining have odd powers.
Mm.. Are you sure? I'm not meant to work through using the two expansions and change it in to that?
 

SpiralFlex

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Mm.. Are you sure? I'm not meant to work through using the two expansions and change it in to that?
I got a similar answer to that of the proof by integrating over ranges from 0 to 1 and via subtraction. However I could not get the term you have said although I got everything else.
 

AAEldar

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I got a similar answer to that of the proof by integrating over ranges from 0 to 1 and via subtraction. However I could not get the term you have said although I got everything else.
I tried as well and couldn't get it, I got very close but not exact >.<
 

SpiralFlex

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The question does not make mathematical sense,

I don't see how is even possible.
 

SpiralFlex

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I'm going to spend the next 3 hours on this problem and see if I can interpret it differently. I will be reporting back for duty very soon.
 

AAEldar

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The question does not make mathematical sense,

I don't see how is even possible.


It's not.... D: Factorial doesn't apply to negatives.

And by the way Spiral, to get the proper notation you write it as ^nC_n. For future reference :D
 

SpiralFlex

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It's not.... D: Factorial doesn't apply to negatives.

And by the way Spiral, to get the proper notation you write it as ^nC_n. For future reference :D
Thank you! So this question has a flaw in it somewhere. I will get onto it.
 

taeyang

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I got that.. yeh.... probably no where near.
 
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Drongoski

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I think the question is a botched attempt to combine the following:

Show that:

For n even:



For n odd:




So apollo1 made the correct observation.





or is this my botched attempt to explain the inconsistency.
 
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