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[SOLVED] Starting to prove by De Moivre's Theorem
Use de Moivre's theorem to show that
\sum_{n=1} ^{\infty} \frac{sinn\theta}{2^n}=\frac{2^{N+1}sin\theta+sinN\theta-2sin(N+1)\theta}{2^N(5-4cos\theta)}
(cos\theta + isin\theta)^n=cosn\theta + isinn\theta
Just need a little help on how to start this question. Where would I get the \frac{sinn\theta}{2^n} from?
Homework Statement
Use de Moivre's theorem to show that
\sum_{n=1} ^{\infty} \frac{sinn\theta}{2^n}=\frac{2^{N+1}sin\theta+sinN\theta-2sin(N+1)\theta}{2^N(5-4cos\theta)}
Homework Equations
(cos\theta + isin\theta)^n=cosn\theta + isinn\theta
The Attempt at a Solution
Just need a little help on how to start this question. Where would I get the \frac{sinn\theta}{2^n} from?