Fourier series technique to show that the following series sum to the quantities

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The discussion focuses on using Fourier series to prove that the series sum of 1/(2n-1)^2 converges to π^2/8 as n approaches infinity. Participants express uncertainty about applying the Fourier method to this specific series, despite successfully proving other related series, such as sum(1/n^4) equaling π^4/90 and sum(1/n^2) equaling π^2/6. One user suggests setting the function f(x) to |x| and calculating the Fourier coefficients a_0 and a_n, indicating a potential approach to the problem. The conversation highlights the challenge of adapting known Fourier series techniques to this particular series identity. The thread emphasizes the need for clarity on the application of Fourier series in proving this specific sum.
maddogtheman
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Use the Fourier series technique to show that the following series sum to the quantities shown:
1+1/3^2+1/5^2+...+1/n^2=pi^2/8 for n going to infinity

I foudn the series to be:

sum(1/(2n-1)^2,n,1,infinity)

but I don't know how to prove the idenity.

I don't know how to go about solving it using the Fourier method. Any help would be greatly appreciated, thanks!

I was able to prove sum(1/n^4,n,1,infinity)=pi^4/90 and sum(1/n^2,n,1,infinity)=pi^2/6 and I'm not sure if the problem is simular.
 
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Set ##f(x)=|x|##. Then ##a_0=\int_{-\pi}^{\pi} |x|\,dx =\pi^2## and ##a_n=\frac{1}{\pi}\int_{-\pi}^{\pi}|x|\cos(nx)\,dx =\frac{\cos(\pi n)-1}{n^2}## and consider ##x=0##.
 
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