Difference between revisions of "Mock AIME 1 2007-2008 Problems/Problem 15"
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This sum [[telescope]]s (in other words, when we expand the sum, all of the intermediate terms will cancel) to <cmath>-\frac{\sin^2(1)}{\cos(1)} -\frac{\sin^2(2)}{\cos(2)} + \frac{\sin^2(44)}{\cos(44)} + \frac{\sin^2(45)}{\cos(45)}.</cmath> | This sum [[telescope]]s (in other words, when we expand the sum, all of the intermediate terms will cancel) to <cmath>-\frac{\sin^2(1)}{\cos(1)} -\frac{\sin^2(2)}{\cos(2)} + \frac{\sin^2(44)}{\cos(44)} + \frac{\sin^2(45)}{\cos(45)}.</cmath> | ||
− | We now have the desired four terms. There are a couple of ways to express <math>\Phi,\,\Psi</math> as primitive trigonometric functions; for example, if we move a <math>\sin</math> to the denominator, we could express it as <math>\Phi(x) = \sin(x),\, \Psi(x) = \cot(x)</math>. Either way, we have <math>{\theta_1,\theta_2,\theta_3,\theta_4} = {1^{\circ},2^{\circ},44^{\circ},45^{\circ}}</math>, and the answer is <math>1+2+44+45 = \boxed{092}</math>. | + | We now have the desired four terms. There are a couple of ways to express <math>\Phi,\,\Psi</math> as primitive trigonometric functions; for example, if we move a <math>\sin</math> to the denominator, we could express it as <math>\Phi(x) = \sin(x),\, \Psi(x) = \cot(x)</math>. Either way, we have <math>\{\theta_1,\theta_2,\theta_3,\theta_4\} = \{1^{\circ},2^{\circ},44^{\circ},45^{\circ}\}</math>, and the answer is <math>1+2+44+45 = \boxed{092}</math>. |
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 20:28, 2 April 2008
Problem
The sum can be written in the form , where are trigonometric functions and are degrees . Find .
Solution
By the product-to-sum identities, we know that , so :
&= \sum_{x=2}^{44} \cos(x-1) - \cos(x+1) + \frac{1}{\cos(x+1)} - \frac{1}{\cos(x-1)}\\ &=\sum_{x=2}^{44} \frac{\cos^2(x-1)-1}{\cos(x-1)} - \frac{\cos^2(x+1)-1}{\cos(x+1)}\\
&=\sum_{x=2}^{44} \left(\frac{\sin^2(x+1)}{\cos(x+1)}\right) - \left(\frac{\sin^2(x-1)}{\cos(x-1)}\right)$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)This sum telescopes (in other words, when we expand the sum, all of the intermediate terms will cancel) to
We now have the desired four terms. There are a couple of ways to express as primitive trigonometric functions; for example, if we move a to the denominator, we could express it as . Either way, we have , and the answer is .
See also
Mock AIME 1 2007-2008 (Problems, Source) | ||
Preceded by Problem 14 |
Followed by Last problem | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 |