The question doesn't want you to evaluate the limit of the Riemann Sum. It wants to you convert the expression into the definite integral and evaluate it. Recall thatView attachment 34867
hi , I really need help for this. how do I evaluate the n inside the cos function and why is there a 1/n next to the sigma notation? can anyone please do a step by step calculation?
Hello. Please show us the steps that you'd tried, so that tutors may review them. Here's a link to the forum's posting guidelines (summary). Thank you! ?When I plug that in the answer box, it’s wrong
Can you show us exactly what you entered, and what the program showed when you did so? It may be just a matter of using the wrong format, or something more subtle.My teacher told me earlier to match the above function with the the right-endpoint Riemann sum notation. I actually found cosx in the end. Then I used FTC 2 and found sin(4pi/9) in the end. When I plug that in the answer box, it’s wrong though.
You can't simply insert the [imath]\dfrac{9}{4\pi}[/imath], then ignore it.