Fourier series (integration of pi)

DanPF
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Homework Statement



Hi

First of all this a textbook question from Stroud Advanced Engineering Mathematics, solution is given, but no steps are shown.

A question I just can't seem to solve at the moment, as below.

A function f(x) is defined by f(x) = \pi - x:0 < x < \pi
f(x + 2\pi) = f(x)

Express the function as a half range cosie series

Homework Equations



Im at a loss of how to start this question, I've been doing fine when they haven't included pi in the function itself.

I know as its wanted as a cosine series I'll have to make it resemble an even function and thus my a0 and an terms can be

2/\pi \int^{\pi}_{0}\pi - x dx\stackrel{2}{\pi}\int^{\pi}_{0}\pi - x\:cosnx:dx

So my main question is really how I remove pi. I've tried taking it out as a constant which doesn't work, so I have a feeling I am not realising something

The final solution according to the book is

\pi/2 + 4/\pi\left\{cosx + 1/9:cos3x + 1/25:cos5x+ ...\right\}

I keep getting -\pi^2 for a0

Thank you for reading and any help
 
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DanPF said:
\stackrel{2}{\pi}\int^{\pi}_{0}\pi - x\:cosnx:dx

Since you haven't actually shown what you did, I will make a wild guess that your problem is caused by leaving the parentheses out:

\stackrel{2}{\pi}\int^{\pi}_{0}(\pi - x)\:cosnx\ dx

You don't treat \pi any differently than you would treat a number like 5.
 
Hi

Thanks for the reply, sorry I didnt put down more of my working, I was having trouble using the Latex. I have solved the problem as I was forgetting the a0/2 term, and didnt correctly integrate the -pi term.
 
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