complex no (1 Viewer)

bobo123

Member
Joined
Feb 7, 2003
Messages
300
Gender
Female
HSC
2003
a friend sent me this:

part (i)
show that:
sum of series

n
E (z+z^2+......z^k) = nz/(1-z) - z^2(1-z^n)/(1-z)^2
k=1

part (ii)
let z= cos@+isin@, where 0<@<2pi

deduce that

n
E (sin@+sin2@...........+sink@)
k=1

= ((n+1)sin@ - sin(n+1)@)/4sin^2 (@/2)


you may assume that

z/(1-z) = i(cis(@/2))/2sin(@/2)



i got very close but.............yeah :(
 

bobo123

Member
Joined
Feb 7, 2003
Messages
300
Gender
Female
HSC
2003
i tried muscling it out but cant seem to get the exact answer
i was just hoping for someone here to find a shortcut :)
 

McLake

The Perfect Nerd
Joined
Aug 14, 2002
Messages
4,187
Location
The Shire
Gender
Male
HSC
2002
Well part i) is a geometric progression.

Working on part ii) ...
 

bobo123

Member
Joined
Feb 7, 2003
Messages
300
Gender
Female
HSC
2003
im thinking its just my carelessness screwing me over

which question do you reckon this one would be in the paper? difficulty wise (1-8)
 

bobo123

Member
Joined
Feb 7, 2003
Messages
300
Gender
Female
HSC
2003
school certificate?
are you really that powerful in maths? :eek:
 

spice girl

magic mirror
Joined
Aug 10, 2002
Messages
785
You're supposed to use


Im{nz/(1-z) - z^2(1-z^n)/(1-z)^2} =
n
E (sin@+sin2@...........+sink@)
k=1

Plug z/(1-z) = i(cis(@/2))/2sin(@/2) in, and expand and simplify.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top