Simon Bridge said:You mean:
\int_0^{\frac{\pi}{2}} \cos^{2k+1}(\theta)d\theta... eg: evaluate the definite integral of an arbitrary odd-power of cosine.
The standard approach is to start by integrating by parts.
You'll end up with a reducing formula which you can turn into a ratio of factorials - apply the limits - after which it is a matter of relating that to the factorial form of the gamma function.
eg. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CosineIntegral.html
Simon Bridge said:If it was easy there'd be no point setting it as a problem.
I'm not going to do it for you ...
Do you know what a gamma function is? You can represent it as a factorial?
Can you identify where you are having trouble seeing what is going on?
Perhaps you should try to do the derivation for yourself?