HATLEY1997
Junior Member
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2023
- Messages
- 59
Got on okay with part a. I understand I need to use the formula a1(1-r^2)/1-r for part b. However I am struggling with proving this as well as c. Any help or links for guidance?
Could it be that you have forgotten a few things?
Am I correct in saying (for b) that r=1/2e^(ipi/3) and a=1 (as substituting 1 for k into (1/4+isqrt(3)/4)^n gives me 1). Putting this into that first formula would give prove the answer required. Does r equal the answer to part a as this is what I seem to have but not sure if that is right or notYou forgot to tell us what you want to solve!
Let's see. I haven't calculated anything, yet.
[math]\begin{array}{lll} |q|&=\left|\dfrac{1}{4}+\dfrac{\sqrt{3}}{4} i \right|= \sqrt{\dfrac{1}{16}+\dfrac{3}{16}}=\dfrac{1}{2}\\ \cos(\varphi) &= \dfrac{1}{4} / (1/2)= 1/2 \Longrightarrow \varphi = 60° = \dfrac{\pi}{3}\\ \sin(\varphi )&= \dfrac{\sqrt{3}}{4} / (1/2) =\dfrac{\sqrt{3}}{2} \Longrightarrow \varphi = 60° = \dfrac{\pi}{3} \\ q= 2^{-1} e^{i \frac{\pi}{3}} \end{array}[/math]
So the representation part is ok. I have trouble understanding the part with the sum. [imath] q^0=1 [/imath] and [imath] q^1=q .[/imath] I have written the formulas the way you need them, starting with [imath] k=1. [/imath]
[math] q^n= \left(2^{-1} e^{i \frac{\pi}{3}}\right)^n=2^{-n}e^{i \frac{n \pi}{3}} [/math]
Perfect will have a look at this - thank you for your help!Let's see. I haven't calculated anything, yet.
[math]\begin{array}{lll} |q|&=\left|\dfrac{1}{4}+\dfrac{\sqrt{3}}{4} i \right|= \sqrt{\dfrac{1}{16}+\dfrac{3}{16}}=\dfrac{1}{2}\\ \cos(\varphi) &= \dfrac{1}{4} / (1/2)= 1/2 \Longrightarrow \varphi = 60° = \dfrac{\pi}{3}\\ \sin(\varphi )&= \dfrac{\sqrt{3}}{4} / (1/2) =\dfrac{\sqrt{3}}{2} \Longrightarrow \varphi = 60° = \dfrac{\pi}{3} \\ q= 2^{-1} e^{i \frac{\pi}{3}} \end{array}[/math]
So the representation part is ok. I have trouble understanding the part with the sum. [imath] q^0=1 [/imath] and [imath] q^1=q .[/imath] I have written the formulas the way you need them, starting with [imath] k=1. [/imath]
[math] q^n= \left(2^{-1} e^{i \frac{\pi}{3}}\right)^n=2^{-n}e^{i \frac{n \pi}{3}} [/math]
Perfect will have a look at this - thank you for your help!
My mistake, I am sorry. They actually started with [imath] k=0 [/imath] because the exponent in the sum was [imath] k-1 [/imath].Where am I missing the 1 at the start?