Need Help Solving Homework Questions?

  • Thread starter Thread starter blueskye
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Homework
blueskye
Messages
4
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



i have questions attached here,help me solve , thx

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution

 

Attachments

  • CCI00000.jpg
    CCI00000.jpg
    26.1 KB · Views: 569
  • CCI00001.jpg
    CCI00001.jpg
    26.9 KB · Views: 427
  • CCI00002.jpg
    CCI00002.jpg
    28.2 KB · Views: 424
Physics news on Phys.org
Sorry, the board don't function like this.
You need to show your attempts before asking for any help. :smile:
 
A number of problems posted with no work shown- thread closed.
 
I picked up this problem from the Schaum's series book titled "College Mathematics" by Ayres/Schmidt. It is a solved problem in the book. But what surprised me was that the solution to this problem was given in one line without any explanation. I could, therefore, not understand how the given one-line solution was reached. The one-line solution in the book says: The equation is ##x \cos{\omega} +y \sin{\omega} - 5 = 0##, ##\omega## being the parameter. From my side, the only thing I could...
Essentially I just have this problem that I'm stuck on, on a sheet about complex numbers: Show that, for ##|r|<1,## $$1+r\cos(x)+r^2\cos(2x)+r^3\cos(3x)...=\frac{1-r\cos(x)}{1-2r\cos(x)+r^2}$$ My first thought was to express it as a geometric series, where the real part of the sum of the series would be the series you see above: $$1+re^{ix}+r^2e^{2ix}+r^3e^{3ix}...$$ The sum of this series is just: $$\frac{(re^{ix})^n-1}{re^{ix} - 1}$$ I'm having some trouble trying to figure out what to...
Back
Top