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Fermatslast
Nov1-04, 09:25 AM
Can anyone help me with this? It's been really annoying me and I think I am just forgetting something:

Using the series expansion for cosx in powers of x find the first four non-zero terms of the corresponding series for sec x.

I get obviously that as secx is 1/cosx it is a case of division of power series but I get confused because it is 1/a power series rather than a power series/a power series so I'm not sure how to treat this.

I would really appreciate help.

Tide
Nov1-04, 09:37 AM
Basically you want to expand this:

\frac {1}{1-stuff}

which you can expand into

1 + stuff + stuff^2 + stuff^3 + O(stuff^4)

and you'll do a lot of algebra to expand the powers of stuff all of which must contain several terms in powers of x. Enjoy!

Fermatslast
Nov1-04, 04:18 PM
Thankyou very much. I will give it a go :)

josephcollins
Nov3-04, 01:08 PM
Okay, get the maclaurin expansion for cosx

namely, 1-x^2/2 + x^4/4! -...

Then write (1+(x^4/4! -x^2/2+...) for cos x

Since sec x =(cosx)^-1 you can now use the binomial theorem to deduce the series for secx

Regards,



Joe