Prove that cos^2 3π/7 - cos^2 3π/14 + cos^2 π/7 = 1/4

achyuth

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Have been trying this for 2 hours and not getting. I went till making the equation cos4π/7cos2π/7 + sin^2 3π/14. Further simplification is making it more complicated.
 
Have been trying this for 2 hours and not getting. I went till making the equation cos4π/7cos2π/7 + sin^2 3π/14. Further simplification is making it more complicated.
cos^2 3π/7 - cos^2 3π/14 + cos^2 π/7 = 1/4

substitute

u = π/14................... to get

cos2(6u) - cos2(3u) + cos2(2u) = 1/4

Next I would use:

cos2(t) = [cos(2t) +1]/2 ........................... to eliminate those pesky 'squares'.


Please show us what you have tried and exactly where you are stuck.

Please share your work/thoughts about this problem.
 
cos^2 3π/7 - cos^2 3π/14 + cos^2 π/7 = 1/4

substitute

u = π/14................... to get

cos2(6u) - cos2(3u) + cos2(2u) = 1/4

Next I would use:

cos2(t) = [cos(2t) +1]/2 ........................... to eliminate those pesky 'squares'.


Please show us what you have tried and exactly where you are stuck.

Please share your work/thoughts about this problem.
I don't think what you are suggesting will work. Because 7 is a prime number any of the usual cosine or sine transformations will simply lead to further angles with denominators of 7 14 or 28.
 
I don't think what you are suggesting will work. Because 7 is a prime number any of the usual cosine or sine transformations will simply lead to further angles with denominators of 7 14 or 28.
What would be your proposed method?
 
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