Understanding the Relationship Between Sin and Cos in a Trigonometric Equation

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the relationship between sine and cosine in the context of a trigonometric equation involving products of sine functions. Participants explore the derivation of a specific identity related to these functions and question the correctness of a given expression in a textbook.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant presents a product formula involving cosine and sine, suggesting a transformation from cosine to sine using the identity cos(2θ) = 1 - 2(sin(θ))^2.
  • Another participant claims there is a typo in the textbook regarding the sine function's argument, asserting it should include a "2" in the denominator.
  • A third participant seeks clarification on whether the question is incorrect or if they have made a mistake in deriving the product of sine functions.
  • Daniel reiterates the typo claim and encourages the participant to solve the equation and relate the solutions to the identity they have proven.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express disagreement regarding the correctness of the textbook's expression, with some asserting it is a typo while others question the validity of the question itself. No consensus is reached on the resolution of these issues.

Contextual Notes

The discussion highlights potential ambiguities in the expressions used and the assumptions underlying the derivations. There is uncertainty regarding the correct formulation of the sine product identity.

3.14lwy
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Given that


n = Π[2 – 2cos(kπ/ n)] ... (where Π is the product sign , from k = 1 to n-1 )


as
cos2@ = 1 – 2(sin@)^2

then
2 – 2cos(kπ/ n) = 4[sin(kπ/ 2n)]^2 , for k = 1 , 2 , 3 , … n-1

then
n = Π[4[sin(kπ/ 2n)]^2] = [4^(n-1)] Π[sin(kπ/ 2n)]^2

but the book then said
Π[sin(kπ/ n)]^2 = n / [4^(n-1)]

why ?
why is not the sin(kπ/ 2n) but sin(kπ/ n) ?
 
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It's definitely a typo.It must be the "2" in the denominator.

Daniel.
 
thank you first .


actually , the question is asking me to show :

[tex]$ \prod_{1}^{n-1} \sin{(\frac{k\pi}{n})} = \frac{n^{0.5}}{2^{n-1}}[/tex]

by finding the roots of [tex]\ x^{2n} - 1 = 0[/tex]

is the question wrong or I have made misstake?
 
Again it's the "2" in the denominator missing...As for the equation,solve it and see whether you can relate the solutions to the identity which you have proven.

Daniel.
 

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