A problem that seems deceptively easy. (1 Viewer)

Lazarus

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Consider this image:



Note that the question specifically asks for the answer as a fraction or a surd.
 

Lazarus

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mm it stumped me as well.

The only info you're really given is the length of the sides, which happen to be a Pythagorean triplet, but I couldn't figure out what that meant in terms of the angles of the triangle (if anything).
 

McLake

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I've tried:

Double angle
Sin rule
^2

None have worked so far ...

It's not a tricky polynomial thing, is it?
 

McLake

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notice sin 60 or cos 30 = (sqrt3)/2 which squares to 3/4. Is this relevent???

cotx = 3/4
cosx/sinx = 3/4

....
 

Lazarus

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that's actually radians, dumbarse, and it's in neither fraction nor surd form :p
 

Dumbarse

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or u could just call me a dumarse considering i cannot solve this stoopid thing, four pages of working and ive gotten nowhere

have u got the answer how to do it laz?

it seems too simple but i cannot isolate theta by itself without it becoming irrational
 

Lazarus

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I don't know how to do it... a guy just starting 4u asked me via ICQ.


It was being discussed in the chatroom the other night... Ex-Nor said that entering ArcSin(4/5) into Mathematica showed it to be transcendental.


Yet I've been assured that the question does have a proper answer.
 

marsesbars

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Fraction or surd? Well I might have a way to start... Using the power series for sinx, (big image sorry)



Let sinx=4/5
Solve the polynomial (I don't know how! :) ) and one root will be the value we want.
Thing is, you'll also get an infinite number of other solutions, because a polynomial of degree n has n solutions, and this polynomial has infinite degree... this is troubling
 
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McLake

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Nice idea marsbars, but I don't think that will yeild an answer (infinite terms become too tricky) ....
 

Lazarus

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Ahh!! Actually, I don't think we need to solve the polynomial... if you take the series expansion for sin x and simply let x = 4/5, the RHS of the expansion should just be equal to sin 4/5. And so maybe, with a few manipulations, we can work out the sum, or something... *wonders off to try a few things*

edit: hmm on second thought, expansions are usually used for approximating the answer, not obtaining exactly. hmm.
 

marsesbars

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Heh, it's the damndest thing, all I need is the power series for inverse sine!


put x=4/5 and voila! :D
 

Lazarus

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Hmm I suppose a series of fractions would have to be acceptable as well :)

nice, marsesbars...
 

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