solve the equation sec(2x)cos(6x) + 1 = 0

hndalama

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a. prove that cos3x = 4cos3x - 3cosx by substituting (2x + x) for 3x.

b. solve the equation sec(2x)cos(6x) + 1 = 0

I have proved the identity in part a but I need help solving part b. My attempt is as follows:
cos(3x + 3x)/cos2x + 1 = 0
cos(3x + 3x) + cos2x = 0
2cos23x -1 + cos2x = 0
2(cos3x)(cos3x) + 2cos2x - 2 = 0
(cos3x)(cos3x) + cos2x - 1=0
(4cos3x - 3cosx)(4cos3x - 3cosx) + cos2x -1 = 0
16cos6x - 24cos4x + 10cos2x - 1 = 0
???
 
a. \(\displaystyle \cos(3x)=\cos(x+2x)=\cos x\cos(2x)-\sin x\sin(2x)=\cos x(2\cos^2x-1)-\sin x\cdot 2\sin x\cos x=2\cos^3x-\cos x-2\sin^2x\cos x=2\cos^3x-\cos x-2(1-\cos^2x)\cos x=4\cos^3x-3\cos x\)
 
a. \(\displaystyle \cos(3x)=\cos(x+2x)=\cos x\cos(2x)-\sin x\sin(2x)=\cos x(2\cos^2x-1)-\sin x\cdot 2\sin x\cos x=2\cos^3x-\cos x-2\sin^2x\cos x=2\cos^3x-\cos x-2(1-\cos^2x)\cos x=4\cos^3x-3\cos x\)
1. Please stop posting fully-worked solutions, especially without any explanation.
2. Please review carefully students' posts. For instance, in this case, the student clearly said that part (b) is at issue.

Thank you.
 
a. prove that cos3x = 4cos3x - 3cosx by substituting (2x + x) for 3x.

b. solve the equation sec(2x)cos(6x) + 1 = 0

I have proved the identity in part a but I need help solving part b. My attempt is as follows:

. . .cos(3x + 3x)/cos2x + 1 = 0
. . .cos(3x + 3x) + cos2x = 0
. . . 2cos23x -1 + cos2x = 0
. . . 2(cos3x)(cos3x) + 2cos2x - 2 = 0
. . . (cos3x)(cos3x) + cos2x - 1=0
. . . (4cos3x - 3cosx)(4cos3x - 3cosx) + cos2x -1 = 0
. . . 16cos6x - 24cos4x + 10cos2x - 1 = 0
. . . ???
Ugh! This is gonna be messy, pretty much no matter how we proceed....

Obviously, they gave you the first part so you can use the second part. I agree with what you've done so far. However, when things seem only to get nastier (and the associated polynomial, 16X^6 - 24X^4 + 10X^2 - 1, does not factor), it may be time to try something else. In this case, maybe try something unexpected with the commutativity of multiplication.

. . . . .cos(6x) = cos(2(3x)) = cos(3(2x))

Now apply part (a):

. . . . .cos(3(2x)) = 4 cos^3(2x) - 3 cos(2x)

Now bring in the rest of the equation, but without doing anything with the "cos(2x)" part:

. . . . .sec(2x) cos(6x) + 1 = 0

. . . . .cos(6x) / cos(2x) + 1 = 0

Multiply through by cos(2x):

. . . . .cos(6x) + cos(2x) = 0

Then:

. . . . .4 cos^3(2x) - 3 cos(2x) + 1 cos(2x) = 0

. . . . .4 cos^3(2x) - 2 cos(2x) = 0

Divide through by 2:

. . . . .2 cos^3(2x) - cos(2x) = 0

And this does factor! Now can you solve? ;)
 
. . . . .2 cos^3(2x) - cos(2x) = 0

And this does factor! Now can you solve? ;)

that was brilliant, I solve it as follows:

cos2x(2cos22x - 1) = 0
cos2x(sqrt(2)cos2x - 1)(sqrt(2)cos2x +1) = 0

cos2x= 1/sqrt2 and cos2x= -1/sqrt2 give the solutions x = 22.5 and 67.5 (0<x<90) which are correct

but the third factor cos2x = 0 gives a solution x= 45 which is not correct
 
that was brilliant, I solve it as follows:

cos2x(2cos22x - 1) = 0
cos2x(sqrt(2)cos2x - 1)(sqrt(2)cos2x +1) = 0

cos2x= 1/sqrt2 and cos2x= -1/sqrt2 give the solutions x = 22.5 and 67.5 (0<x<90) which are correct

but the third factor cos2x = 0 gives a solution x= 45 which is not correct

sec(2x) does not exist (hence your equation does not exist) when cos(2x) = 0

So cos(2x)=0 is excluded from the solution set.
 
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