1 Let P be a given point on a given curve C. The osculating circle to C at P is defined to be the circle that satisfies the following two conditions at P: it touches C; and the rate of change of its gradient is equal to the rate of change of the gradient of C.
Find the centre and radius of the osculating circle to the curve y=1−x+tanx at the point on the curve with x-coordinate 41π.
Hint
1 When two curves meet they share common coordinates; when they “touch” they also share a common gradient. In the case of the osculating circle, they also have a common curvature at the point of contact. Since curvature (a further maths topic) is a function of both dxdy and dx2d2y, the question merely states that C and its osculating circle at P have equal rates of change of gradient. It makes sense then to differentiate twice both the equation for C and that for a circle, with equation of the form (x−a)2+(y−b)2=r2, and then equate them when x=41π. The three resulting equations in the three unknowns a, b and r then simply need to be solved simultaneously.
For y=1−x+tanx, dxdy=−1+sec2x and dx2d2y=2sec2xtanx.
For (x−a)2+(y−b)2=r2, 2(x−a)+2(y−b)dxdy=0 and 2+2(y−b)dx2d2y+2(dxdy)2=0.
When x=41π, y=2−41π and so (41π−a)2+(2−41π−b)2=r2;
dxdy=−(y−b)(x−a)=1 then gives a relationship between a and b;
and dx2d2y=4=−2(y−b)4 gives the value of b.
Working back then gives a and r.
Answers: The osculating circle to C at P has centre (41π−21,25−41π) and radius 21.
Model Solution
Step 1: Evaluate the curve and its derivatives at x=4π.
For y=1−x+tanx:
dxdy=−1+sec2x=tan2x
dx2d2y=2sec2xtanx
At x=4π:
y=1−4π+tan4π=2−4π
dxdy=tan24π=1
dx2d2y=2sec24πtan4π=2⋅2⋅1=4
Step 2: Differentiate the general circle equation.
Let the osculating circle have equation (x−a)2+(y−b)2=r2.
Differentiating implicitly with respect to x:
2(x−a)+2(y−b)dxdy=0(1)
Differentiating again:
2+2(y−b)dx2d2y+2(dxdy)2=0(2)
Step 3: Apply conditions at the point of contact.
At x=4π, the circle passes through the point (4π,2−4π):
(4π−a)2+(2−4π−b)2=r2(3)
The circle touches the curve, so their gradients are equal. From equation (1):
dxdy=−y−bx−a
Setting dxdy=1:
−2−4π−b4π−a=1
a−4π=2−4π−b
a+b=2(4)
The rates of change of gradient are equal. From equation (2):
dx2d2y=−y−b1+(dxdy)2
Setting dx2d2y=4:
4=−2−4π−b1+1=−2−4π−b2
2−4π−b=−21
b=25−4π
Step 4: Find a and r.
From (4): a=2−b=2−25+4π=4π−21.
From (3):
r2=(4π−4π+21)2+(2−4π−25+4π)2=41+41=21
r=21
The osculating circle has centre (4π−21,25−4π) and radius 21.
Examiner Notes
This question was attempted by almost two-thirds of the candidature, with a mean mark of around 1121. Whilst most attempts were very successful, a lot of marks were lost by poorly structured working, where the candidate got themselves confused in some way or another. The only two common conceptual difficulties were the oversight of the equal gradients at the point of contact and the lack of a suitable circle equation to start working with. Apart from these, most candidates’ work went smoothly and successfully, although sign errors often cost them at least one of the final three answer marks.
2 Prove that
cos3x=4cos3x−3cosx.
Find and prove a similar result for sin3x in terms of sinx.
(i) Let
I(α)=∫0α(7sinx−8sin3x)dx.
Show that
I(α)=−38c3+c+35,
where c=cosα. Write down one value of c for which I(α)=0.
(ii) Useless Eustace believes that
∫sinnxdx=n+1sinn+1x
for n=1,2,3,…. Show that Eustace would obtain the correct value of I(β), where cosβ=−61.
Find all values of α for which he would obtain the correct value of I(α).
Hint
2 The single-maths approach to the very first part is to use the standard trig. “Addition” formulae for sine and cosine, and then to use these results, twice, in (i); firstly, to rewrite sin3x in terms of sin3x so that direct integration can be undertaken; then to express cos3x in terms of cos3x in order to get the required “polynomial” in cosx. Using the given “misunderstanding” in (ii) then leads to a second such polynomial which, when equated to the first, gives an equation for which a couple of roots have already been flagged. Unfortunately, the several versions of the question that were tried, in order to help candidates, ultimately led to the inadvertent disappearance of the interval 0 to π in which answers had originally been intended. This meant that there was a little bit more work to be done at the end than was initially planned.
This was the most popular question on the paper, drawing an attempt from almst every candidate. There were several proofs of the initial trigonometric identities using de Moivre’s Theorem but most settled for the more standard cosine and sine of (2x+x). Personally, I was against the inclusion of the given answer of cos−1(−61) in (ii) as it led to what struck me as an unwelcome dichotomy of approaches. Most candidates opted to verify that the two polynomials in “c” that arose gave the same numerical answer, and this working was not entirely straightforward – in the event, lots of candidates failed to show the markers that they had done the working correctly for both expressions – whereas my original intention had been that they should collect terms up into a single polynomial equation and factorise it by first spotting the (repeated) factor (c−1) hinted at in (i).
There was one important mathematical oversight that many candidates made during this question, and it was due to not reading the question sufficiently carefully. The wording of the question in (ii) clearly states that Eustace’s misunderstanding of the integration of powers of the sine function was for n=1,2,3,…. Unfortunately, rather a lot of candidates thought that he would then have integrated sinx (i.e. the case n=1) correctly as −cosx. We concocted a mark-scheme for this eventuality which allowed candidates ‘follow-through’ for 6 out of the 10 marks allocated here, but the self-imposed penalty of four marks could not be avoided as it was just no longer possible to get, for instance, the given answer.
Finally, there is a bit of an apology to make: at some final stage of the printing process, the bit of the question that identified α as lying in the range 0 to π got removed; this left candidates having to think about general solutions rather than just the two decently small ones that had been looked-for when the question was first written. Nevertheless, not only was this the most popular question for number of attempts, it was also the most successful for candidates with a man score of almost 15.
3 The first four terms of a sequence are given by F0=0, F1=1, F2=1 and F3=2. The general term is given by
Fn=aλn+bμn,(*)
where a,b,λ and μ are independent of n, and a is positive.
(i) Show that λ2+λμ+μ2=2, and find the values of λ,μ,a and b.
(ii) Use (∗) to evaluate F6.
(iii) Evaluate n=0∑∞2n+1Fn.
Hint
3 You don’t have to have too wide an experience of mathematics to be able to recognise the Fibonacci Numbers in a modest disguise here. (However, this is of little help here, as you should be looking to follow the guidance of the question.) In (i), you are clearly intended to begin by substituting n=0,1,2 and 3, in turn, into the given formula for Fn, using the four given terms of the sequence. You now have four equations in four unknowns, and the given result in (i) is intended to help you make progress; with (ii) having you check the formula in a further case. In the final part, you should split the summation into two parts, each of which is an infinite geometric progression.
(i) F0=0⇒0=a+b or b=−a. Then F1=1⇒1=a(λ−μ).
[F2=1⇒1=a(λ2−μ2)⇒λ+μ=1 is needed later]
and F3=2⇒2=a(λ3−μ3)=a(λ−μ)(λ2+λμ+μ2) by the difference of two cubes
=1⋅(λ2+λμ+μ2)⇒λ2+λμ+μ2=2
Then, using any two suitable eqns., e.g. any two of λμ=−1, λ−μ=a1 and λ+μ=1, and
Both are geometric series. We check convergence: ∣λ/2∣=41+5≈0.809<1 and ∣μ/2∣=45−1≈0.309<1, so both converge.
=251⋅1−2λ1−251⋅1−2μ1
Computing each denominator:
1−2λ=1−41+5=43−5
1−2μ=1−41−5=43+5
So:
∑n=0∞2n+1Fn=251⋅3−54−251⋅3+54
Rationalising each fraction:
3−54=(3−5)(3+5)4(3+5)=9−54(3+5)=3+5
3+54=(3+5)(3−5)4(3−5)=44(3−5)=3−5
Therefore:
∑n=0∞2n+1Fn=251[(3+5)−(3−5)]=251⋅25=1
Examiner Notes
One doesn’t need to be too devoted a mathematician to recognise the Fibonacci numbers in this question, and many candidates clearly recognised this sequence. However, they were still required to answer the question in the way specified by the wording on the paper and a lot of attempts foundered at part (ii). This was the second most frequently attempted question, yet drew the second worst marks, averaging just over 8. Most attempts got little further than (i), and many foundered even here due to a lack of appreciation of the difference of two cubes factorisation. Things clearly got much worse in (ii) when far too many folks seemed incapable of attempting a binomial expansion of (1+5)6; many who did manage a decent stab at this then repeated the work for (1−5)6. Very few sorted this out correctly and, as a result, there were relatively few stabs at part (iii).
4 (i) Let
I=∫0af(x)+f(a−x)f(x)dx.
Use a substitution to show that
I=∫0af(x)+f(a−x)f(a−x)dx
and hence evaluate I in terms of a.
Use this result to evaluate the integrals
∫01ln(2+x−x2)ln(x+1)dxand∫02πsin(x+4π)sinxdx.
(ii) Evaluate
∫212x(sinx+sinx1)sinxdx.
Hint
4 Hopefully, the obvious choice is y=a−x for the initial substitution and, as with any given result, you should make every effort to be clear in your working to establish it. Thereafter, the two integrals that follow in (i) use this result with differing functions and for different choices of the upper limit a. Since this may be thought an obvious way to proceed, it is (again) important that your working is clear in identifying the roles of f(x) and f(a−x) in each case. In part (ii), however, it is not the first result that is to be used, but rather the process that yielded it. The required substitution should, again, be obvious, and then you should be trying to mimic the first process in this second situation.
(i) Using the substn. y=a−x, dy=−dx and (0,a)→(a,0) so that
This question received about the same number of “hits” as Q1 and came out with an average mark only fractionally lower. For the majority, the introductory work was successfully completed along with the rest of (i), although a lot of candidates’ working was very unclear in the first integral, involving logarithms. One or two marks were commonly lost as the correct answer of 21 could easily have been guessed from the initial result, and the working produced by the candidates failed to convince markers that it had been obtained legitimately otherwise. The fault was often little more than failing either to identify the relevant "f(x)" or to show it implicitly by careful presentation of the working of the log. function.
The excellent part (ii) required candidates to mimic the method used to find the opening result rather than repeat its use in a new case, and this was only accessible to those with that extra bit of insight or determination.
5 The points A and B have position vectors i+j+k and 5i−j−k, respectively, relative to the origin O. Find cos2α, where 2α is the angle ∠AOB.
(i) The line L1 has equation r=λ(mi+nj+pk). Given that L1 is inclined equally to OA and to OB, determine a relationship between m, n and p. Find also values of m, n and p for which L1 is the angle bisector of ∠AOB.
(ii) The line L2 has equation r=μ(ui+vj+wk). Given that L2 is inclined at an angle α to OA, where 2α=∠AOB, determine a relationship between u, v and w.
Hence describe the surface with Cartesian equation x2+y2+z2=2(yz+zx+xy).
Hint
5 The opener here is a standard bit of A-level maths using the scalar product, and the following parts use this method, but with a bit of additional imagination needed. In 3-dimensions, there are infinitely lines inclined at a given angle to another, specified line, and this is the key idea of the final part of the question. Leading up to that, in (i), you need only realise that a line equally inclined to two specified (non-skew) lines must lie in the plane that bisects them (and is perpendicular to the plane that contains, in this case, the points O, A and B). One might argue that the vector treatment of “planes” is further maths work, but these ideas are simple geometric ones.
cos2α=3⋅27(1,1,1)∙(5,−1,−1)=31
** (i) ** l1 equally inclined to OA and OB iff m2+n2+p2⋅3(m,n,p)∙(1,1,1)=m2+n2+p2⋅27(m,n,p)∙(5,−1,−1)
i.e. 3(m+n+p)=5m−n−p or m=2(n+p).
For l1 to be the angle bisector, we also require (e.g.) m2+n2+p2⋅3m+n+p=cosα, where
cos2α=2cos2α−1=31⟹cosα=32, so that m+n+p=m2+n2+p2⋅2.
Squaring both sides: m2+n2+p2+2mn+2np+2pm=2(m2+n2+p2)
⟹2mn+2np+2pm=m2+n2+p2
Setting m=2n+2p (or equivalent) then gives 2np+(2n+2p)2=(2n+2p)2+n2+p2
which gives (n−p)2=0⟹p=n, m=4n.
Thus mnp=411, or any non-zero multiple will suffice.
** (ii) ** If you used the above method then you already have this relationship; namely,
2uv+2vw+2wu=u2+v2+w2
Thus, 2xy+2yz+2zx=x2+y2+z2 gives all lines inclined at an angle cos−132 to OA and
hence describes the surface which is a double-cone, vertex at O, having central axis OA.
Although it seems that 3-dimensional problems are not popular, this is actually a very, very easy question indeed and requires little more than identifying an appropriate right-angled triangle and using some basic trig. and/or Pythagoras. There are thus so many ways in which one can approach the three parts to this question that it is difficult to put forward just the one.
** (i) ** Taking the midpoint of AB as the origin, O, with the x-axis along AB and the y-axis along OC, we have a cartesian coordinate system to help us organise our thoughts.
Then A=(−21,0,0), B=(21,0,0),
C=(0,23,0) by trig. or Pythagoras, and
P=(0,63,0). The standard distance formula
then gives PA (or PB) = 33 and PD=36 or 32.
** (ii) ** The angle between adjacent faces is (e.g.) ∠DOC=cos−1(213613) in right-angled triangle
DOP, which gives the required answer, cos−131.
(iii)
The centre, S, of the inscribed sphere must, by symmetry, lie on PD, equidistant from each vertex.
By Pythagoras, x2=121+(96−236x+x2)⇒x=46.
Then r=xsin(90∘−(ii))=31x=126.
Alternatively, if you know that the sphere’s centre is at the centre of mass of the tetrahedron, the point (S) with position vector 41(a+b+c+d), then the answer
is just 41DP=126.
Model Solution
Preamble: Finding cos2α
We have OA=i+j+k and OB=5i−j−k.
∣OA∣=1+1+1=3,∣OB∣=25+1+1=33
OA⋅OB=5−1−1=3
cos2α=∣OA∣∣OB∣OA⋅OB=3⋅333=93=31
Part (i)
The line L1 has direction vector (m,n,p). For L1 to be equally inclined to OA and OB, the cosine of the angle with OA must equal the cosine of the angle with OB:
So n=p, giving m=4n. Therefore (m,n,p)=(4,1,1), or any non-zero scalar multiple.
Part (ii)
A line through the origin with direction (u,v,w) makes angle α with OA when:
u2+v2+w2⋅3u+v+w=32
By the same algebra as in part (i), squaring and simplifying yields:
u2+v2+w2=2(uv+vw+wu)
This is the required relationship between u, v and w.
For the surface x2+y2+z2=2(yz+zx+xy): a point (x,y,z)=0 lies on this surface if and only if its position vector satisfies the condition above, meaning the line from the origin to (x,y,z) makes angle α=21cos−131 with OA.
The set of all lines through a fixed point making a fixed angle with a given line is a double cone. Thus the surface is a double cone with vertex at the origin, axis along OA, and half-angle α=21cos−131.
Examiner Notes
This was the least popular question on the paper and attracted the lowest average score of about 7. This is partly explained by the way that, like Q3 and Q6 particularly, it drew a lot of attempts from desperate weaker students who started, only to give up before too long (in order, presumably, to try yet another question in some hit-and-miss approach, scrambling for odd marks here and there). Of those who persevered, there were plenty of marks to be had. Little more was required than the use of the scalar product, a careful application of algebra, and a modest grasp of the geometrical implications of what the working represented.
6 Each edge of the tetrahedron ABCD has unit length. The face ABC is horizontal, and P is the point in ABC that is vertically below D.
(i) Find the length of PD.
(ii) Show that the cosine of the angle between adjacent faces of the tetrahedron is 1/3.
(iii) Find the radius of the largest sphere that can fit inside the tetrahedron.
Hint
Although it seems that 3-dimensional problems are not popular, this is actually a very, very easy question indeed and requires little more than identifying an appropriate right-angled triangle and using some basic trig. and/or Pythagoras. There are thus so many ways in which one can approach the three parts to this question that it is difficult to put forward just the one.
** (i) ** Taking the midpoint of AB as the origin, O, with the x-axis along AB and the y-axis along OC, we have a cartesian coordinate system to help us organise our thoughts.
Then A=(−21,0,0), B=(21,0,0),
C=(0,23,0) by trig. or Pythagoras, and
P=(0,63,0). The standard distance formula
then gives PA (or PB) = 33 and PD=36 or 32.
** (ii) ** The angle between adjacent faces is (e.g.) ∠DOC=cos−1(213613) in right-angled triangle
DOP, which gives the required answer, cos−131.
(iii) The centre, S, of the inscribed sphere must, by symmetry, lie on PD, equidistant from each vertex.
By Pythagoras, x2=121+(96−236x+x2)⇒x=46.
Then r=xsin(90∘−(ii))=31x=126.
Alternatively, if you know that the sphere’s centre is at the centre of mass of the tetrahedron, the point (S) with position vector 41(a+b+c+d), then the answer
is just 41DP=126.
Model Solution
Part (i)
Let M be the midpoint of AB. We set up coordinates with M at the origin, the x-axis along AB, and the y-axis along MC.
Since ABC is an equilateral triangle with side 1:
A=(−21,0,0),B=(21,0,0),C=(0,23,0)
The centroid P of triangle ABC lies at the average of the three vertices:
P=(3−21+21+0,30+0+23,0)=(0,63,0)
Since D is vertically above P, we have D=(0,63,h) for some h>0.
Using ∣DA∣=1:
(21)2+(63)2+h2=1
41+363+h2=1
41+121+h2=1
124+h2=1⟹h2=32
PD=h=32=36
Part (ii)
Let M′ be the midpoint of BC. The dihedral angle between faces ABC and DBC along edge BC equals the angle ∠M′PD in the triangle DM′P, since:
DM′ is the median of equilateral triangle DBC, so DM′⊥BC
PM′ lies in the base ABC and PM′⊥BC (since P is the centroid and M′ is the midpoint of BC, the line PM′ is along the median from A to BC, which is perpendicular to BC)
Computing the lengths. First, PM′: since P is the centroid and M′ is the midpoint of BC, the distance PM′ is one-third of the median from A to BC:
PM′=31⋅23=63
Next, DM′ is the height of equilateral triangle DBC:
DM′=23
In right-angled triangle DPM′ (right-angled at P since DP⊥ the base):
tan(∠DM′P)=PM′DP=3/66/3=36⋅36=22
So sec2(∠DM′P)=1+8=9, giving cos(∠DM′P)=31.
The cosine of the angle between adjacent faces is 31. ✓
Part (iii)
The centre S of the inscribed sphere lies, by symmetry, on the altitude PD. Let SP=r, so S is at distance r from the base ABC, and SD=PD−r=36−r.
For the sphere to be tangent to face DBC, the perpendicular distance from S to the plane DBC must equal r. Since DP is perpendicular to the base ABC, and the dihedral angle between the base and face DBC is α (where cosα=31), the angle between DP and face DBC is 90∘−α. Therefore the perpendicular distance from S to face DBC is:
SD⋅sin(90∘−α)=SD⋅cosα=3SD
Setting this equal to r:
r=31(36−r)
3r=36−r
4r=36
r=126
Alternative method: For a regular tetrahedron, the inscribed sphere’s centre coincides with the centroid, which lies on each altitude at a ratio of 1:3 from the base. Since PD=36:
r=41⋅PD=126
Examiner Notes
Of the pure maths questions on the paper, only Q5 and this one attracted attempts from under half the candidature; this despite the fact that it is obviously (to the trained eye, at least) the easiest question on the paper. Parts (i) and (ii) require nothing more than GCSE trigonometry, and (iii) can be done in one line if one knows a little bit about geometric centres of 3-d shapes. Clearly 3-dimensional objects, and the associated trig., are sufficiently daunting to have put most folks off either completely or early on in the proceedings, and the average mark scored here was under 10.
7 (i) By considering the positions of its turning points, show that the curve with equation
y=x3−3qx−q(1+q),
where q>0 and q=1, crosses the x-axis once only.
(ii) Given that x satisfies the cubic equation
x3−3qx−q(1+q)=0,
and that
x=u+q/u,
obtain a quadratic equation satisfied by u3. Hence find the real root of the cubic equation in the case q>0,q=1.
(iii) The quadratic equation
t2−pt+q=0
has roots α and β. Show that
α3+β3=p3−3qp.
It is given that one of these roots is the square of the other. By considering the expression (α2−β)(β2−α), find a relationship between p and q. Given further that q>0,q=1 and p is real, determine the value of p in terms of q.
Hint
7 The first two parts of the question begin, helpfully, by saying exactly what to consider in order to proceed, and the material should certainly appear to be routine enough to make these parts very accessible. Where things are going in (iii) may not immediately be obvious but, presumably, there is a purpose to (i) and (ii) which should become clear in (iii).
(i)y=x3−3qx−q(1+q)⇒dxdy=3(x2−q)=0 for x=±q.
When x=+q, y=−q(q+1)2<0 since q>0
When x=−q, y=−q(q−1)2<0 since q>0 and q=1
Since both TPs below x-axis, the curve crosses the x-axis once only (possibly with sketch)
(ii)x=u+uq⇒x3=u3+3uq+3uq2+u3q3
0=x3−3qx−q(1+q)=u3+3uq+3uq2+u3q3−3qu−3uq2−q−q2
⇒u3+u3q3−q(1+q)=0 or (u3)2−q(1+q)(u3)+q3=0
u3=2q(1+q)±q2(1+q)2−4q3=2q{1+q±1+2q+q2−4q}
=2q{1+q±(1−q)2}=2q{1+q±(1−q)}=q or q2
giving u=q31 or q32 and x=q31+q32
(iii)α+β=p, αβ=q⇒α3+β3=(α+β)3−3αβ(α+β)=p3−3qp.
One root is the square of the other ⇔α=β2 or β=α2⇔0=(α2−β)(α−β2).
Then 0=(α2−β)(α−β2)=α3+β3−αβ−(αβ)2=p3−3qp−q(1+q)
Since q>0 and q=1, we have (q−1)2>0, so −q(q−1)2<0.
Both turning points lie below the x-axis. Since the leading coefficient of x3 is positive, y→−∞ as x→−∞ and y→+∞ as x→+∞. The curve therefore crosses the x-axis exactly once (to the right of x=q).
This is a quadratic in u3. By the quadratic formula:
u3=2q(1+q)±q2(1+q)2−4q3.
The discriminant simplifies as:
q2(1+q)2−4q3=q2((1+q)2−4q)=q2(1−2q+q2)=q2(1−q)2.
So q2(1−q)2=q∣1−q∣. Since q>0 and q=1:
u3=2q(1+q)±q∣1−q∣.
If 0<q<1: ∣1−q∣=1−q, giving u3=2q(1+q)±q(1−q), so u3=q or u3=q2.
If q>1: ∣1−q∣=q−1, giving u3=2q(1+q)±q(q−1), so u3=q2 or u3=q.
In either case, u3=q or u3=q2, yielding u=q1/3 or u=q2/3.
Since x=u+q/u, taking u=q1/3 gives x=q1/3+q2/3. (Taking u=q2/3 gives the same value of x.)
The real root of the cubic is x=q1/3+q2/3.
Part (iii)
By Vieta’s relations: α+β=p and αβ=q.
α3+β3=(α+β)3−3αβ(α+β)=p3−3qp.
Now suppose one root is the square of the other, i.e., α=β2 or β=α2. This is equivalent to
(α2−β)(β2−α)=0.
Expanding:
(α2−β)(β2−α)=α2β2−α3−β3+αβ=(αβ)2+αβ−(α3+β3).
Setting this to zero and substituting αβ=q and α3+β3=p3−3qp:
q2+q−(p3−3qp)=0,
p3−3qp−q(1+q)=0.(...)
This is exactly the cubic equation from part (ii) with p in place of x. Since q>0 and q=1, part (ii) gives the unique real root:
p=q1/3+q2/3.
Examiner Notes
Q7 This proved to be the second most popular question on the paper, both by choice and by success. I imagine that its helpful structure probably contributed significantly to both. Part of the problem is that there are ways to do this using methods not on single maths specifications, so it was necessary to be quite specific. Nonetheless, there were still areas where marks were commonly lost; in (i), candidates were required to show that both TPs lie below the x-axis and, while one of the y-coordinates was obviously negative (being the sum of three negative terms), the other one was only obviously so by completing the square. The problems found by candidates, even in the first case, just highlights the widespread difficulty found by students when dealing with inequalities.
8 The curves C1 and C2 are defined by
y=e−x(x>0)andy=e−xsinx(x>0),
respectively. Sketch roughly C1 and C2 on the same diagram.
Let xn denote the x-coordinate of the nth point of contact between the two curves, where 0<x1<x2<⋯, and let An denote the area of the region enclosed by the two curves between xn and xn+1. Show that
An=21(e2π−1)e−(4n+1)π/2
and hence find n=1∑∞An.
Hint
8 When asked to draw sketches of graphs, it is important to note the key features. The first curve is a standard “exponential decay” curve; the second has the extra factor of sinx. Now sinx oscillates between −1 and 1, and introduces zeroes at intervals of π. Thus, C2 oscillates between C1 and −C1, with zeroes every π units along the x-axis. This sketch of the two curves should then make it clear that the xi that are then introduced are the x-coordinates of C2’s maxima, when sinx=1. [It is important to be clear in your description of xn and xn+1 in terms of n as these are going to be substituted as limits into the area integrals that follow.] The integration required to find one representative area will involve the use of “parts”, and the final summation looks like it must be that of an infinite GP.
The curves meet each time sinx=1 when x=2nπ+2π (n=0,1,2,…).
Thus xn=2(4n−3)π and xn+1=2(4n+1)π.
∫(e−xsinx)dx attempted by parts =−e−x⋅cosx−∫(e−x⋅cosx)dx or −e−x⋅sinx−∫(e−x⋅sinx)dx
(depending on your choice of ‘1st’ and ‘2nd’ part) =−e−x⋅cosx−{e−x⋅sinx+∫(e−x⋅sinx)dx}.
Then I=−e−x(cosx+sinx)−I (by “looping”) =−21e−x(cosx+sinx)
An=∫xnxn+1(e−x−e−xsinx)dx=[−e−x+21e−x(cosx+sinx)]xnxn+1 or [21e−x(cosx+sinx−2)]xnxn+1