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Help with Polynomial, please, (1 Viewer)

Jason Xie

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The first two questions i got it, but not the last one, can anyone do it, show working please, Thank you so much!!!

未命名.jpg
 

Jason Xie

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I think, the last one is much harder, guys, try ur best to solve it!!, thank you!!
 

qrpw

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Hmm, weird question, just by looking at it, it's pretty easy to prove without induction.
 

deswa1

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I haven't tried it yet but I think you need to use the stronger form of induction i.e. assume true for n=k and all integers up to k (1,2,...,k) and then prove for k+1. I'll do it tomorrow if no one has done it by then.
 

Carrotsticks

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The first two questions i got it, but not the last one, can anyone do it, show working please, Thank you so much!!!

View attachment 25346
From where did you get this question? I'm inclined to think that the question has a typo because the Auxiliary equation (T_n = T_{n-1} - T_{n-2}) does not match the quadratic polynomial given.

Verifying it now.
 

Carrotsticks

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Yep confirmed typo in Question 2. Should be:



Will post solution shortly.
 

Carrotsticks

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Here's the first two for the mean time.

Doing the third one now, keep making silly mistakes and getting ridiculous solutions.

 

thorax94

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From where did you get this question? I'm inclined to think that the question has a typo because the Auxiliary equation (T_n = T_{n-1} - T_{n-2}) does not match the quadratic polynomial given.

Verifying it now.
Hi Carrotsticks, I am Jason's classmate and this question came from some homework that our 4u teacher gave us. There is indeed a typo.
 

Carrotsticks

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Rest of (my) solution. May have made a silly mistake somewhere, a bit tired now.



EDIT: Tried to make image a bit larger for you to see.
 
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Trebla

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Third part requires strong induction.





Just in case you can't see jeffwu95's solution:

(i)
By sum of roots:



Using sum and product of roots:



(ii)
If a and b are the roots of x2 + x + 1 = 0 then

 
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seanieg89

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Seems silly to require it to be done by induction when de moivre's is a course theorem...
 

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