HSC 2013 MX2 Marathon (archive) (1 Viewer)

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RealiseNothing

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

Nice work guys,



First method I used was:





Subtracting the two gives:





Using this on each term in the series gives:



Now consider:



Taking the real part of this gives the sum of the cosines we need, so since I cbf evaluating the real part of this, your series is equal to:

 

Sy123

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

First method I used was:





Subtracting the two gives:





Using this on each term in the series gives:



Now consider:



Taking the real part of this gives the sum of the cosines we need, so since I cbf evaluating the real part of this, your series is equal to:

That is the method I had in mind, nice work.

This is the last series question I will post in a while, I want to ask more different questions. It is one that I'm trying to solve now but I haven't cracked it yet.





EDIT: I found a solution for it (not mine), using De Moivre to get a polynomial for tan(nx) (when making LHS zero) then using sum of roots.
 
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Secant

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

Totally an MX2 question:

Suppose p is an odd prime. Prove that:





~peace out homie~
 

Secant

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

That is the method I had in mind, nice work.

This is the last series question I will post in a while, I want to ask more different questions. It is one that I'm trying to solve now but I haven't cracked it yet.



I'm still workin on this question homie, tricky question but i'll get it

~peace out homie~
 

Sy123

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon



(provide proof)
 

Sy123

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

This was a good one (even though I said I won't post more series questions)

 

OMGITzJustin

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

serious? i thought it was pretty standard
questions in that book are relatively easy, so in comparison with the others it was classified as one the hardest ones you can do out of all the questions for that particular exercise
 

Secant

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon



(provide proof)
tan(2x)=2tanx/(1-(tanx)^2) and tan(3x)=(3tanx-(tanx)^3)/(1-3(tanx)^2) therefore the answer is (1/2)[ln(2(cosx)^2-1]+(2/3)ln(cosx)-(1/3)[4(sinx)^2-1] + C
 

Sy123

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

tan(2x)=2tanx/(1-(tanx)^2) and tan(3x)=(3tanx-(tanx)^3)/(1-3(tanx)^2) therefore the answer is (1/2)[ln(2(cosx)^2-1]+(2/3)ln(cosx)-(1/3)[4(sinx)^2-1] + C
So how did you integrate:



?
 
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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

Is the antiderivative expressible in terms of elementary functions?
 

seanieg89

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

Is the antiderivative expressible in terms of elementary functions?
Any rational function of trig functions has elementary primitive.

t substitutions -> partial fractions -> integrating rational functions with at most quadratic denoms, all of which are elementary.
 
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Sy123

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Re: HSC 2013 4U Marathon

This problem boils down to:



Rearranging:





Which is easily integratable
 
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