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Hard Inequalities Help (1 Viewer)

king.rafa

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Prove the following
a)1+x+x^2>0
b)1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4>0
c) For all positive integers n, 1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4+...x^(2n-1)+x^(2n)>0
d)x=-1 is the only zero of 1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4+...x^(2n-1)

I do not have a clue as to how to start any of these questions. Can anyone please help me with the solutions? I'm just going through the extension questions of the Cambridge 3 unit book and these ones are killers
 

lolokay

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a)1+x+x^2>0
x^2+x+1/4>-3/4
(x+1/2)^2>-3/4
therefore true

b)1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4>0
x(x^3+1) + (x^3+1)>-x^2
(x+1)^2(x^2-x+1)>-x^2
true if
x^2 - x + 1 > 0
(x - 1/2)^2 > -3/4
therefore true

too tired to do the other 2
 

minijumbuk

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lolokay said:
a)1+x+x^2>0
x^2+x+1/4>-3/4
(x+1/2)^2>-3/4
therefore true

b)1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4>0
x(x^3+1) + (x^3+1)>-x^2
(x+1)^2(x^2-x+1)>-x^2
true if
x^2 - x + 1 > 0
(x - 1/2)^2 > -3/4
therefore true

too tired to do the other 2
Neither of a) nor b) make any sense. This question was either poorly worded, or some hints were not shown. How can anyone know what the value of x is? I mean, sure you can solve it and then come up with a square root of negative, but that still only shows the value of x, not actually proving the equation given.
 

tommykins

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回复: Re: Hard Inequalities Help

minijumbuk said:
Neither of a) nor b) make any sense. This question was either poorly worded, or some hints were not shown. How can anyone know what the value of x is? I mean, sure you can solve it and then come up with a square root of negative, but that still only shows the value of x, not actually proving the equation given.
It makes perfect sense, inequalities assume that x is a real number, and any number squared is positive. The first one proves it by saying the square of x+1/2 is bigger than -3/4, which is a negative number, which makes it true.

b)1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4>0
x(x^3+1) + (x^3+1)>-x^2 -> makes sense
(x+1)^2(x^2-x+1)>-x^2 -> negative number as -x^2 is always negative
true if
x^2 - x + 1 > 0since we know (x+1)^2 > 0 , we only need to cover the other bracket
(x - 1/2)^2 > -3/4 same technique as a
therefore true

They make sense and are correct.
 

king.rafa

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3unitz said:
you dont make any sense



if x > 0, clearly true
if x = 0, LHS = 1, therefore true
1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4+...x^(2n-1)+x^(2n) = [1 - x^(2n + 1)] / (1 - x)
if x < 0, numerator is positive as (2n + 1) is odd for all positive integers n, and denominator is positive, therefore true



y = 1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4+...x^(2n-1)
= [1 - x^(2n)] / (1 - x)

for all positive integers n:
when -1 < x <1
1 - x^(2n) > 0
(1 - x) > 0
.'. y > 0
when x = 1, y = 1 + 1 + 1 +...+ 1 > 0
when x > 1
1 - x^(2n) < 0
(1 - x) < 0
.'. y > 0
when x < -1
1 - x^(2n) < 0
(1 - x) > 0
.'. y < 0

.'. y>0 for x>-1, and y<0 for x<-1, since y is continuous, x=-1 is the only zero
for your proof, when you use the difference of the powers, and come up with [1 - x^(2n)] / (1 - x), do you have to worry about discontinuities, or because there weren't any in the original, ie. y = 1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4+...x^(2n-1), do you just disregard it? like cant you just make x-1=(x-1)(1-x) / (1-x) and have a discontinuity at x=1?
 
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lolokay

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king.rafa said:
for your proof, when you use the difference of the powers, and come up with [1 - x^(2n)] / (1 - x), do you have to worry about discontinuities, or because there weren't any in the original, ie. y = 1+x+x^2+x^3+x^4+...x^(2n-1), do you just disregard it? like cant you just make x-1=(x-1)(1-x) / (1-x) and have a discontinuity at x=1?
x-1=(x-1)(1-x) / (1-x) if x=/=1, so they're not the exact same thing. Similarly, [1 - x^(2n)] / (1 - x) is the not the exact same expression as the one that the inequality gives, as it is not true for x=1. So for x=1 you have to use the original expression.
 

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