Mathematical Induction (1 Viewer)

lyounamu

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(ii) Use mathematical induction to prove that, for all integers [FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n [/FONT]1, tanθ tan 2θ+tan 2θ tan 3θ+[FONT=EDLGL I+ MT] +[/FONT]tan [FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]nθ [/FONT]tan([FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n +[/FONT]1)θ=−([FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n +[/FONT]1))+cotθ tan([FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n +[/FONT]1)θ.

Thi question is ridiculous in my opinion.

You can not even prove that when n=1, the both side of the equation satisfies.

So, I missed the first step and went onto the 2nd and 3rd steps and solved it. But I don't know how to prove that the equation is correct when n = 1. (i.e. LHS = RHS)
 
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lyounamu said:
(ii) Use mathematical induction to prove that, for all integers [FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n [/FONT][FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times][/FONT]1, tanθ tan 2θ+tan 2θ tan 3θ+[FONT=EDLGL I+ MT] +[/FONT]tan [FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n[/FONT][FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]θ [/FONT]tan([FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n [/FONT][FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]+[/FONT]1)θ=−([FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n [/FONT][FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]+[/FONT]1))+cotθ tan([FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]n [/FONT][FONT=EDLGK F+ Times,Times]+[/FONT]1)θ.

Thi question is ridiculous in my opinion.

You can not even prove that when n=1, the both side of the equation satisfies.

So, I missed the first step and went onto the 2nd and 3rd steps and solved it. But I don't know how to prove that the equation is correct when n = 1. (i.e. LHS = RHS)
is it missing stuff?
like where theres the 2 pluses and the unpaired parentheses???

but yeah this question looks ridiculous
is step 3 hard to prove??
 

lolokay

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you want to show that tanxtan2x = -(2) + [cotx][tan2x], yeah?

= (2tan^2 x + 2 - 2)/(1 - tan^2 x)
= -2 + 2cotx tanx/(1 - tan^2 x)
= -2 + cotx tan2x
 

lyounamu

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tacogym27101990 said:
is it missing stuff?
like where theres the 2 pluses and the unpaired parentheses???

but yeah this question looks ridiculous
is step 3 hard to prove??
It wasn't that hard to prove. But I cannot even prove that n=1 from LHS and RHS in the first place!
 

lyounamu

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lolokay said:
you want to show that tanxtan2x = -(2) + [cotx][tan2x], yeah?

= (2tan^2 x + 2 - 2)/(1 - tan^2 x)
= -2 + 2cotx tanx/(1 - tan^2 x)
= -2 + cotx tan2x
Ah. Yes. I get it now. Thanks.
 

ProGT408

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Gonna reopen this thread after a while lol, so how do you prove the second and third steps?
 

ProGT408

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what’s the actual question because the OP is like unreadable
yea my bad,

tanθtan2θ+tan2θtan3θ+...tannθtan(n+1)θ=tan(n+1)θcotθ-(n+1)

I got the base case, but after idek how to sub in the inductive step

its worth mentioning there is a part a which gives the identity tana + tanb = tan(a+b) * (1-tanatanb)
 
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WeiWeiMan

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yea my bad,

tanθtan2θ+tan2θtan3θ+...tannθtan(n+1)θ=tan(n+1)θcotθ-(n+1)

I got the base case, but after idek how to sub in the inductive step

its worth mentioning there is a part a which gives the identity tana + tanb = tan(a+b) * (1-tanatanb)
You could try a telescoping sum and see what happens
 

Luukas.2

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Here is a complete proof, though there may be simplifications available...

Theorem: For all integers


Proof: By induction on :

A: Put

Note: Using the identity quoted by @ProGT408, with gives , which allows:


By either method, the result is true when .

B: Let be a value of for which the result is true. That is:


We must now prove the result for . That is, we must prove that




Now, considering the given identity:




So, if the result is true for , then it must also be true for .

C: It follows from A and B by the process of mathematical induction that the result is true for all positive integers .
 

liamkk112

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heres my proof (excluding base case)

our assumption is that tanxtan2x + tan2xtan3x +... + tankxtan(k+1)x = tan(k+1)x cotx - (n+1) (im using x instead of theta its easier to type)

then we are proving that tanxtan2x + tan2xtan3x +... + tankxtan(k+1)x + tan(k+1)xtan(k+2)x = tan(k+2)xcotx - (k+2)

subbing in our assumption we get

LHS = tan(k+1)xcotx +tan(k+1)xtan(k+2)x - (k+1)

using tan angle sum we see that tan(k+2)x = (tan(k+1)x +tanx)/(1-tan(k+1)xtanx)
so LHS = tan(k+1)x/tanx + tan(k+1)x (tan(k+1)x +tanx)/(1-tan(k+1)xtanx) (cotx = 1/tanx) - (k+1)
then factoring tan(k+1)x and adding fractions:

LHS = tan(k+1)x (1 - tanxtan(k+1)x + tanxtan(k+1)x + tan^2x)/(tanx(1-tanxtan(k+1)x)) - (k+1)
= tan(k+1)x (1+tan^2x)/(tanx(1-tanxtan(k+1)x)) (k+1)
then splitting up the fraction, we now want to recover tan(k+2)x, so we should add tanx and subtract tanx:

LHS =(tan(k+1)x + tanx - tanx)/(tanx(1-tanxtan(k+1)x)) + (tan(k+1)tan^2x)/(tanx(1-tanxtan(k+1)x)) - (k+1)

= tan(k+2)x/tanx - tanx/(tanx(1-tanxtan(k+1)x)) + (tan(k+1)tan^2x)/(tanx(1-tanxtan(k+1)x)) - (k+1) by angle sum
then factoring out tanx we get

LHS = tan(k+2)x/tanx - tanx( 1 - tanxtan(k+1)x)/(tanx(1-tanxtan(k+1)x)) - (k+1)
which cancels to give

LHS = tan(k+2)x/tanx - 1 - (k+1)

then since 1/tanx = cotx and -1 - (k+1) = -(k+2) we get

LHS = tan(k+2)xcotx - (k+2) = RHS as required
 

Luukas.2

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FYI, this a variation on the 2006 MX1 HSC question 5(d).
 

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