I've been working on this one for a while. I can see where the numbers come from, but I just can't seem to justify why it would be this way...? Any tips/suggestions woul be great!
. . .Show that:
. . .1/96 <= 1/(pi^2) Int(Pi/4 to Pi/3) xcosx dx <= 1/36sqrt(2)
I have been trying to use the Squeeze Theorem, so:
. . .-x/pi^2 <= xcosx/pi^2 <= x/pi^2
Thus, when x is between pi/4 and pi/3, we get:
. . .1/4pi <= xcosx/pi^2 <= 1/3pi
Therefore:
. . .1/48 <= Int (pi/4 to Pi/3) xcosx/pi^2 <= 1/36 (ie I multiplied by pi/12)
I am out by a factor of 1/2 (ie i understand is cos(pi/3) on the left and 1/sqrt(2) - ie cos(pi/4)on the right but dont understand how to encorporate them???
Cheers for any suggestions and tips!
Rhys
. . .Show that:
. . .1/96 <= 1/(pi^2) Int(Pi/4 to Pi/3) xcosx dx <= 1/36sqrt(2)
I have been trying to use the Squeeze Theorem, so:
. . .-x/pi^2 <= xcosx/pi^2 <= x/pi^2
Thus, when x is between pi/4 and pi/3, we get:
. . .1/4pi <= xcosx/pi^2 <= 1/3pi
Therefore:
. . .1/48 <= Int (pi/4 to Pi/3) xcosx/pi^2 <= 1/36 (ie I multiplied by pi/12)
I am out by a factor of 1/2 (ie i understand is cos(pi/3) on the left and 1/sqrt(2) - ie cos(pi/4)on the right but dont understand how to encorporate them???
Cheers for any suggestions and tips!
Rhys