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polynomials + integration q (1 Viewer)

bally24

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1. The equation x<sup>3</sup> + qx + r has roots alpha (a), beta (b) and gamma (c). Find expressions for
a) a<sup>2</sup> + b<sup>2</sup> + c<sup>2</sup>
b) a<sup>4</sup> + b<sup>4</sup> + c<sup>4</sup>
c) a<sup>5</sup> + b<sup>5</sup> + c<sup>5</sup>
<o></o>
for part a) I just did (a+b+c)<sup>2</sup> – 2(ab + bc + cd) using the sum of roots, product of roots etc.
however I’m really stuck on parts b) and c) – ive tried multiplying various things together and doing (a + b + c)<sup>4</sup> then factorising but nothing seems to work to get it in terms of the roots taken one at a time, two at a time, three at a time. so i really have no idea....

2. Integrate (tanx)<sup>4</sup> dx
<o></o>
I tried changing it to (sinx)<sup>4</sup>/(cosx)<sup>4</sup> but that doesn’t help at all, I couldn’t make it into a log without adding in pronumerals which you can’t do. I tried expressing it as ((secx)<sup>2</sup> – 1 )<sup>2</sup> but that just gets really tricky. Is there a faster way?
 

hyparzero

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f(x) = x3 + qx + r has roots a, b, c ; hence the roots must satisfy f(x).

Hence
a3 = - (qa + r)
b3 = - (qb + r)
c3 = - (qc + r)

thus;
a4 = - a(qa + r)
b4 = - b(qb + r)
c4 = - c(qc + r)

Hence a4 + b4 + c4 = - [ a(qa + r) + b(qb + r) + c(qc + r)]

Do the same thing for degree 5 roots
 

bally24

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oh right...that seems so simple now, thanks for your help with that one!
 

onebytwo

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for the integral try changing it into part sec^2(x) - 1 and part tan^2(x) then try and use a substitution
 

Riviet

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tan4x=tan2x(sec2x-1)
=tan2x.sec2x - tan2x
=tan2x.sec2x - (sec2x - 1)

Split integral into two parts and use substitution u=tanx to integrate tan2x.sec2x with respect to x. The other part is easy.

Hope that helps.
 

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