camdaman12
Member
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2014
- Messages
- 40
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2015
how did everyone go?
That last question seems pretty easy?Uhhhh did it 8 hours and suddenly forgets everything...
Question 16:
~ Induction - Strong Induction/Recursion
~ General solution of cos2x + cos3x +cos4x = 0, we were given the sums to products formula
~ Final part worth 5 marks:
(z+1)^n+(z-1)^n = 0
1) RTP: mod(z-1) = mod(z+1), and therefore prove that all roots of the equation can be expressed as i(alpha, k) where (alpha, k is a real number)
2) Sum of (roots squared) from n = 1 to k equals n(n-1)
FROM MEMORY
What is being asked here? I don't know what they mean by i(alpha, k).Uhhhh did it 8 hours and suddenly forgets everything...
Question 16:
~ Induction - Strong Induction/Recursion
~ General solution of cos2x + cos3x +cos4x = 0, we were given the sums to products formula
~ Final part worth 5 marks:
(z+1)^n+(z-1)^n = 0
1) RTP: mod(z-1) = mod(z+1), and therefore prove that all roots of the equation can be expressed as i(alpha, k) where (alpha, k is a real number)
2) Sum of (roots squared) from n = 1 to k equals n(n-1)
FROM MEMORY
What is being asked here? I don't know what they mean by i(alpha, k).
So it is asking to prove that all the roots a imaginary then, because that would make sense.
Shouldn't that be -n(n-1)?Uhhhh did it 8 hours and suddenly forgets everything...
Question 16:
~ Induction - Strong Induction/Recursion
~ General solution of cos2x + cos3x +cos4x = 0, we were given the sums to products formula
~ Final part worth 5 marks:
(z+1)^n+(z-1)^n = 0
1) RTP: mod(z-1) = mod(z+1), and therefore prove that all roots of the equation can be expressed as i(alpha, k) where (alpha, k is a real number)
2) Sum of (roots squared) from n = 1 to k equals n(n-1)
FROM MEMORY
Nope, it was definitely positive.Shouldn't that be -n(n-1)?
How can the sum of squares of imaginary numbers (assuming the roots are purely imaginary) be positive?Nope, it was definitely positive.
This is exactly what I was thinking. I also did it by expanding the equation through binomial theorem:How can the sum of squares of imaginary numbers (assuming the roots are purely imaginary) be positive?
(Assuming ''Sum of (roots squared)'' referred to .)