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STEP3 2013 -- Pure Mathematics

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STEP3 2013 — Section A (Pure Mathematics)

Section titled “STEP3 2013 — Section A (Pure Mathematics)”

Exam: STEP3  |  Year: 2013  |  Questions: Q1—Q8  |  Total marks per question: 20

All questions are pure mathematics. Solutions and examiner commentary are included below.

QTopicDifficultyKey Techniques
1积分 IntegrationChallenging万能代换,递推关系,部分分式分解
2级数 SeriesHard莱布尼茨法则,麦克劳林展开,微分方程递推
3向量与几何 Vectors and GeometryChallenging向量点积,坐标几何,对称性
4复数 Complex NumbersChallenging单位根因式分解,复数代入,三角恒等式
5数论 Number TheoryHard互质论证,素因数分析,反证法
6复数 Complex NumbersChallenging复数模的展开,共轭乘积化简,三角不等式,不等式推导
7微分方程 Differential EquationsHard能量函数构造,首次积分,微分验证,不等式估计
8复数与几何 Complex Numbers and GeometryHard几何级数求和,圆锥曲线焦点准线性质,三角恒等式,复数方法

Topic: 积分 Integration  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

1 Given that t=tan12xt = \tan \frac{1}{2}x, show that dtdx=12(1+t2)\frac{\mathrm{d}t}{\mathrm{d}x} = \frac{1}{2}(1 + t^2) and sinx=2t1+t2\sin x = \frac{2t}{1 + t^2}.

Hence show that

012π11+asinxdx=21a2arctan1a1+a(0<a<1).\int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \frac{1}{1 + a \sin x} \, \mathrm{d}x = \frac{2}{\sqrt{1 - a^2}} \arctan \frac{\sqrt{1 - a}}{\sqrt{1 + a}} \qquad (0 < a < 1).

Let

In=012πsinnx2+sinxdx(n0).I_n = \int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \frac{\sin^n x}{2 + \sin x} \, \mathrm{d}x \qquad (n \geqslant 0).

By considering In+1+2InI_{n+1} + 2I_n, or otherwise, evaluate I3I_3.

Hint
  1. Thus if Nn=pq\sqrt[n]{N} = \frac{p}{q} where pp and qq are coprime, it is rational and can be written in lowest terms, then qnN=pnq^n N = p^n and so q=1q = 1 and thus Nn\sqrt[n]{N} is an integer. Otherwise, Nn\sqrt[n]{N} cannot be written as pq\frac{p}{q}, that is, it is irrational.

For (ii), using the same logic as in part (i), as bab^a divides aadba^a d^b, bab^a divides dbd^b, so db=kbad^b = k b^a, for some kk. Likewise, aa=kcba^a = k' c^b, for some integer kk', and thus kk=1k k' = 1, so k=k=1k = k' = 1, and db=bad^b = b^a. If pp is a prime factor of dd, then pp divides dbd^b, and so bab^a too. Writing ba=bba1b^a = b b^{a-1}, using the logic of the very first part of the question, if pp does not divide bb, pp divides ba1b^{a-1}, and repetition of this argument leads to a contradiction. So pp is a prime factor of bb. pmbp^{mb} and pnap^{na} is the highest power of pp that divides db=bad^b = b^a. So mb=namb = na, and b=namb = \frac{na}{m}. So pnp^n divides nana, but as aa and bb are coprime, pnp^n divides nn and thus pnnp^n \le n. By the given result, this means p=1p = 1, and as bb is only divisible by 1, b=1b = 1. If rr is a positive rational ab\frac{a}{b}, such that rr=cdr^r = \frac{c}{d} is rational, then aadb=bacba^a d^b = b^a c^b so b=1b = 1 and rr is a positive integer.

Model Solution

Showing that dtdx=12(1+t2)\frac{\mathrm{d}t}{\mathrm{d}x} = \frac{1}{2}(1 + t^2):

We have t=tan12xt = \tan \frac{1}{2}x, so by the chain rule:

dtdx=12sec2 ⁣12x=12 ⁣(1+tan2 ⁣12x)=12(1+t2).\frac{\mathrm{d}t}{\mathrm{d}x} = \frac{1}{2}\sec^2\!\tfrac{1}{2}x = \frac{1}{2}\!\left(1 + \tan^2\!\tfrac{1}{2}x\right) = \frac{1}{2}(1 + t^2).

Showing that sinx=2t1+t2\sin x = \frac{2t}{1 + t^2}:

Using the double angle formula sinx=2sinx2cosx2\sin x = 2\sin\frac{x}{2}\cos\frac{x}{2}:

sinx=2sinx2cosx2=2sinx2cosx2cos2 ⁣x2+sin2 ⁣x2sec2 ⁣x2sec2 ⁣x2=2tanx21+tan2 ⁣x2=2t1+t2.\sin x = 2\sin\tfrac{x}{2}\cos\tfrac{x}{2} = \frac{2\sin\frac{x}{2}\cos\frac{x}{2}}{\cos^2\!\frac{x}{2} + \sin^2\!\frac{x}{2}} \cdot \frac{\sec^2\!\frac{x}{2}}{\sec^2\!\frac{x}{2}} = \frac{2\tan\frac{x}{2}}{1 + \tan^2\!\frac{x}{2}} = \frac{2t}{1 + t^2}.

Evaluating the integral using the substitution:

Let I=012π11+asinxdxI = \int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \frac{1}{1 + a\sin x}\,\mathrm{d}x.

With t=tanx2t = \tan\frac{x}{2}: when x=0x = 0, t=0t = 0; when x=π2x = \frac{\pi}{2}, t=tanπ4=1t = \tan\frac{\pi}{4} = 1. We have dx=21+t2dt\mathrm{d}x = \frac{2}{1+t^2}\,\mathrm{d}t and sinx=2t1+t2\sin x = \frac{2t}{1+t^2}, so:

I=0111+2at1+t221+t2dt=012(1+t2)+2atdt=012t2+2at+1dt.I = \int_{0}^{1} \frac{1}{1 + \frac{2at}{1+t^2}} \cdot \frac{2}{1+t^2}\,\mathrm{d}t = \int_{0}^{1} \frac{2}{(1+t^2) + 2at}\,\mathrm{d}t = \int_{0}^{1} \frac{2}{t^2 + 2at + 1}\,\mathrm{d}t.

Completing the square in the denominator: t2+2at+1=(t+a)2+(1a2)t^2 + 2at + 1 = (t+a)^2 + (1-a^2).

I=012(t+a)2+(1a2)dt.I = \int_{0}^{1} \frac{2}{(t+a)^2 + (1-a^2)}\,\mathrm{d}t.

Let u=t+au = t + a, so du=dt\mathrm{d}u = \mathrm{d}t:

I=a1+a2u2+(1a2)du=21a2[arctanu1a2]a1+aI = \int_{a}^{1+a} \frac{2}{u^2 + (1-a^2)}\,\mathrm{d}u = \frac{2}{\sqrt{1-a^2}}\left[\arctan\frac{u}{\sqrt{1-a^2}}\right]_{a}^{1+a}

=21a2(arctan1+a1a2arctana1a2).= \frac{2}{\sqrt{1-a^2}}\left(\arctan\frac{1+a}{\sqrt{1-a^2}} - \arctan\frac{a}{\sqrt{1-a^2}}\right).

Since 0<a<10 < a < 1, we have 1a2=(1a)(1+a)\sqrt{1-a^2} = \sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}, so:

1+a1a2=1+a(1a)(1+a)=1+a1a,a1a2=a(1a)(1+a).\frac{1+a}{\sqrt{1-a^2}} = \frac{1+a}{\sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}} = \sqrt{\frac{1+a}{1-a}}, \qquad \frac{a}{\sqrt{1-a^2}} = \frac{a}{\sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}}.

Using the subtraction formula arctanAarctanB=arctanAB1+AB\arctan A - \arctan B = \arctan\frac{A-B}{1+AB}:

1+a1aa(1a)(1+a)1+1+a1aa(1a)(1+a)=1+a(1a)(1+a)a(1a)(1+a)1+a1a.\frac{\sqrt{\frac{1+a}{1-a}} - \frac{a}{\sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}}}{1 + \sqrt{\frac{1+a}{1-a}} \cdot \frac{a}{\sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}}} = \frac{\frac{1+a}{\sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}} - \frac{a}{\sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}}}{1 + \frac{a}{1-a}}.

The numerator is 1(1a)(1+a)=11a2\frac{1}{\sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}} = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-a^2}} and the denominator is 11a\frac{1}{1-a}, so the ratio is:

1a1a2=1a(1a)(1+a)=1a1+a.\frac{1-a}{\sqrt{1-a^2}} = \frac{1-a}{\sqrt{(1-a)(1+a)}} = \sqrt{\frac{1-a}{1+a}}.

Therefore:

I=21a2arctan1a1+a,I = \frac{2}{\sqrt{1-a^2}}\arctan\sqrt{\frac{1-a}{1+a}},

as required.

Evaluating I3I_3:

We have In=012πsinnx2+sinxdxI_n = \int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \frac{\sin^n x}{2+\sin x}\,\mathrm{d}x. Note that sinnx=sinn1xsinx=sinn1x ⁣[(2+sinx)2]\sin^n x = \sin^{n-1}x \cdot \sin x = \sin^{n-1}x\!\left[(2+\sin x) - 2\right], so:

sinnx=(2+sinx)sinn1x2sinn1x.\sin^n x = (2+\sin x)\sin^{n-1}x - 2\sin^{n-1}x.

Dividing by 2+sinx2+\sin x and integrating:

In=012πsinn1xdx2In1.I_n = \int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \sin^{n-1}x\,\mathrm{d}x - 2I_{n-1}.

Rearranging: In+2In1=012πsinn1xdxI_n + 2I_{n-1} = \int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \sin^{n-1}x\,\mathrm{d}x, or equivalently, replacing nn by n+1n+1:

In+1+2In=012πsinnxdx.()I_{n+1} + 2I_n = \int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \sin^n x\,\mathrm{d}x. \qquad (\star)

Let Jn=012πsinnxdxJ_n = \int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi}\sin^n x\,\mathrm{d}x. We need J0,J1,J2J_0, J_1, J_2:

  • J0=π2J_0 = \frac{\pi}{2}.
  • J1=[cosx]0π/2=1J_1 = [-\cos x]_0^{\pi/2} = 1.
  • J2=12π2=π4J_2 = \frac{1}{2} \cdot \frac{\pi}{2} = \frac{\pi}{4} (using the Wallis formula or sin2x=1cos2x2\sin^2 x = \frac{1-\cos 2x}{2}).

From ()(\star) with n=0n = 0: I1+2I0=J0=π2I_1 + 2I_0 = J_0 = \frac{\pi}{2}.

To find I0I_0, set a=12a = \frac{1}{2} in the integral result (since 12+sinx=1211+12sinx\frac{1}{2+\sin x} = \frac{1}{2}\cdot\frac{1}{1+\frac{1}{2}\sin x}):

I0=012π12+sinxdx=122114arctan1232=132arctan13=23π6=π33.I_0 = \int_{0}^{\frac{1}{2}\pi}\frac{1}{2+\sin x}\,\mathrm{d}x = \frac{1}{2}\cdot\frac{2}{\sqrt{1-\frac{1}{4}}}\arctan\sqrt{\frac{\frac{1}{2}}{\frac{3}{2}}} = \frac{1}{\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}}\arctan\frac{1}{\sqrt{3}} = \frac{2}{\sqrt{3}}\cdot\frac{\pi}{6} = \frac{\pi}{3\sqrt{3}}.

From n=0n=0: I1=π22I0=π22π33I_1 = \frac{\pi}{2} - 2I_0 = \frac{\pi}{2} - \frac{2\pi}{3\sqrt{3}}.

From n=1n=1: I2+2I1=J1=1I_2 + 2I_1 = J_1 = 1, so I2=12I1=12 ⁣(π22π33)=1π+4π33I_2 = 1 - 2I_1 = 1 - 2\!\left(\frac{\pi}{2} - \frac{2\pi}{3\sqrt{3}}\right) = 1 - \pi + \frac{4\pi}{3\sqrt{3}}.

From n=2n=2: I3+2I2=J2=π4I_3 + 2I_2 = J_2 = \frac{\pi}{4}, so:

I3=π42I2=π42 ⁣(1π+4π33)=π42+2π8π33.I_3 = \frac{\pi}{4} - 2I_2 = \frac{\pi}{4} - 2\!\left(1 - \pi + \frac{4\pi}{3\sqrt{3}}\right) = \frac{\pi}{4} - 2 + 2\pi - \frac{8\pi}{3\sqrt{3}}.

I3=9π428π33=9π48π332.I_3 = \frac{9\pi}{4} - 2 - \frac{8\pi}{3\sqrt{3}} = \frac{9\pi}{4} - \frac{8\pi}{3\sqrt{3}} - 2.

Examiner Notes

Most candidates attempted this question, making it the most popular and it was also the most successful with a mean score of about two thirds marks. The first two standard results caused few problems, nor did the integration, but some struggled to simplify to the single inverse tan form. In the final part, common errors were failure to reduce to the n=0n = 0 case, confusion with the index e.g. In+2In1=012πsinnxdxI_n + 2I_{n-1} = \int_0^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \sin^n x \, dx instead of the correct result, or for those that were more successful, algebraic inaccuracies let them down. Some attempted a recursive formula to evaluate 012πsinnxdx\int_0^{\frac{1}{2}\pi} \sin^n x \, dx with varying success. Most attempting the last part saw the connection between I0I_0 and the main result of the question.


Topic: 级数 Series  |  Difficulty: Hard  |  Marks: 20

2 In this question, you may ignore questions of convergence.

Let y=arcsinx1x2y = \frac{\arcsin x}{\sqrt{1 - x^2}}. Show that

(1x2)dydxxy1=0(1 - x^2) \frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x} - xy - 1 = 0

and prove that, for any positive integer nn,

(1x2)dn+2ydxn+2(2n+3)xdn+1ydxn+1(n+1)2dnydxn=0.(1 - x^2) \frac{\mathrm{d}^{n+2}y}{\mathrm{d}x^{n+2}} - (2n + 3)x \frac{\mathrm{d}^{n+1}y}{\mathrm{d}x^{n+1}} - (n + 1)^2 \frac{\mathrm{d}^n y}{\mathrm{d}x^n} = 0.

Hence obtain the Maclaurin series for arcsinx1x2\frac{\arcsin x}{\sqrt{1 - x^2}}, giving the general term for odd and for even powers of xx.

Evaluate the infinite sum

1+13!+225!+22×327!++22×32××n2(2n+1)!+.1 + \frac{1}{3!} + \frac{2^2}{5!} + \frac{2^2 \times 3^2}{7!} + \dots + \frac{2^2 \times 3^2 \times \dots \times n^2}{(2n + 1)!} + \dots.

Hint
  1. It is elegant to multiply by the denominator, then differentiate implicitly, and finally multiply by the same factor again to achieve the desired first result. The general result can be proved by then using induction, or by Leibnitz, if known. The general result can be used alongside the expression for yy, and the first derived result with the substitution x=0x = 0 to show that the general term of the Maclaurin series for even powers of xx is zero, and for odd powers of xx is 22r(r!)2(2r+1)!x2r+1\frac{2^{2r}(r!)^2}{(2r+1)!} x^{2r+1}. Thus, as

y=x+223!x3+42225!x5+y = x + \frac{2^2}{3!} x^3 + \frac{4^2 2^2}{5!} x^5 + \dots the required infinite sum is yx\frac{y}{x} with x=12x = \frac{1}{2}, that is 2π39\frac{2\pi\sqrt{3}}{9}.

Model Solution

Showing that (1x2)dydxxy1=0(1-x^2)\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x} - xy - 1 = 0:

Let y=arcsinx1x2y = \frac{\arcsin x}{\sqrt{1-x^2}}. Multiply both sides by 1x2\sqrt{1-x^2}:

y1x2=arcsinx.y\sqrt{1-x^2} = \arcsin x.

Differentiate both sides with respect to xx:

dydx1x2+yx1x2=11x2.\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x}\sqrt{1-x^2} + y \cdot \frac{-x}{\sqrt{1-x^2}} = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-x^2}}.

Multiply through by 1x2\sqrt{1-x^2}:

dydx(1x2)xy=1.\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x}(1-x^2) - xy = 1.

Rearranging:

(1x2)dydxxy1=0.(1-x^2)\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x} - xy - 1 = 0. \qquad \blacksquare

Proving the general recurrence by induction:

We need to show that for any positive integer nn:

(1x2)dn+2ydxn+2(2n+3)xdn+1ydxn+1(n+1)2dnydxn=0.()(1-x^2)\frac{\mathrm{d}^{n+2}y}{\mathrm{d}x^{n+2}} - (2n+3)x\frac{\mathrm{d}^{n+1}y}{\mathrm{d}x^{n+1}} - (n+1)^2\frac{\mathrm{d}^{n}y}{\mathrm{d}x^{n}} = 0. \qquad (\star)

We use Leibniz’s rule: dndxn[fg]=r=0n(nr)drfdxrdnrgdxnr\frac{\mathrm{d}^n}{\mathrm{d}x^n}[fg] = \sum_{r=0}^{n}\binom{n}{r}\frac{\mathrm{d}^r f}{\mathrm{d}x^r}\frac{\mathrm{d}^{n-r}g}{\mathrm{d}x^{n-r}}.

Differentiate (1x2)yxy=1(1-x^2)y' - xy = 1 a total of nn times using Leibniz’s rule.

For the term (1x2)y(1-x^2)y', differentiating nn times:

dndxn[(1x2)y]=(1x2)y(n+1)+n(2x)y(n)+n(n1)2(2)y(n1)\frac{\mathrm{d}^n}{\mathrm{d}x^n}[(1-x^2)y'] = (1-x^2)y^{(n+1)} + n(-2x)y^{(n)} + \frac{n(n-1)}{2}(-2)y^{(n-1)}

=(1x2)y(n+1)2nxy(n)n(n1)y(n1).= (1-x^2)y^{(n+1)} - 2nxy^{(n)} - n(n-1)y^{(n-1)}.

For the term xyxy, differentiating nn times:

dndxn[xy]=xy(n)+ny(n1).\frac{\mathrm{d}^n}{\mathrm{d}x^n}[xy] = xy^{(n)} + ny^{(n-1)}.

Since the right-hand side is the constant 1, its nnth derivative is 0 for n1n \geq 1. So for n1n \geq 1:

(1x2)y(n+1)2nxy(n)n(n1)y(n1)xy(n)ny(n1)=0.(1-x^2)y^{(n+1)} - 2nxy^{(n)} - n(n-1)y^{(n-1)} - xy^{(n)} - ny^{(n-1)} = 0.

Collecting terms:

(1x2)y(n+1)(2n+1)xy(n)n2y(n1)=0.()(1-x^2)y^{(n+1)} - (2n+1)xy^{(n)} - n^2 y^{(n-1)} = 0. \qquad (\dagger)

Now replace nn by n+1n+1 (valid since n1n \geq 1 means n+12n+1 \geq 2):

(1x2)y(n+2)(2(n+1)+1)xy(n+1)(n+1)2y(n)=0,(1-x^2)y^{(n+2)} - (2(n+1)+1)xy^{(n+1)} - (n+1)^2 y^{(n)} = 0,

(1x2)y(n+2)(2n+3)xy(n+1)(n+1)2y(n)=0.(1-x^2)y^{(n+2)} - (2n+3)xy^{(n+1)} - (n+1)^2 y^{(n)} = 0. \qquad \blacksquare

Obtaining the Maclaurin series:

Let y=k=0akxky = \sum_{k=0}^{\infty} a_k x^k. We need ak=y(k)(0)k!a_k = \frac{y^{(k)}(0)}{k!}.

From the original equation (1x2)yxy=1(1-x^2)y' - xy = 1, set x=0x = 0:

y(0)=1.y'(0) = 1.

Also y(0)=arcsin01=0y(0) = \frac{\arcsin 0}{\sqrt{1}} = 0, so a0=0a_0 = 0 and a1=1a_1 = 1.

From ()(\dagger) with n1n \geq 1, set x=0x = 0:

y(n+1)(0)=n2y(n1)(0).y^{(n+1)}(0) = n^2 y^{(n-1)}(0).

This means an+1=y(n+1)(0)(n+1)!=n2y(n1)(0)(n+1)!=n2(n+1)ny(n1)(0)(n1)!=nn+1an1a_{n+1} = \frac{y^{(n+1)}(0)}{(n+1)!} = \frac{n^2 y^{(n-1)}(0)}{(n+1)!} = \frac{n^2}{(n+1)n} \cdot \frac{y^{(n-1)}(0)}{(n-1)!} = \frac{n}{n+1} a_{n-1}.

Wait, let me be more careful. We have y(n+1)(0)=n2y(n1)(0)y^{(n+1)}(0) = n^2 y^{(n-1)}(0) from ()(\dagger) with x=0x=0: (1)y(n+1)(0)0n2y(n1)(0)=0(1)\cdot y^{(n+1)}(0) - 0 - n^2 y^{(n-1)}(0) = 0.

So an+1=y(n+1)(0)(n+1)!a_{n+1} = \frac{y^{(n+1)}(0)}{(n+1)!} and an1=y(n1)(0)(n1)!a_{n-1} = \frac{y^{(n-1)}(0)}{(n-1)!}, giving:

an+1=n2(n+1)!y(n1)(0)=n2(n+1)!(n1)!an1=n2(n+1)nan1=nn+1an1.a_{n+1} = \frac{n^2}{(n+1)!} y^{(n-1)}(0) = \frac{n^2}{(n+1)!} \cdot (n-1)! \cdot a_{n-1} = \frac{n^2}{(n+1)n} a_{n-1} = \frac{n}{n+1} a_{n-1}.

Hmm, that doesn’t seem right for producing the expected coefficients. Let me recheck.

Actually, from ()(\star) directly with x=0x=0: y(n+2)(0)=(n+1)2y(n)(0)y^{(n+2)}(0) = (n+1)^2 y^{(n)}(0).

So an+2=(n+1)2(n+2)!y(n)(0)=(n+1)2(n+2)!n!an=(n+1)2(n+2)(n+1)an=n+1n+2ana_{n+2} = \frac{(n+1)^2}{(n+2)!} y^{(n)}(0) = \frac{(n+1)^2}{(n+2)!} \cdot n! \cdot a_n = \frac{(n+1)^2}{(n+2)(n+1)} a_n = \frac{n+1}{n+2} a_n.

For even indices: a0=0a_0 = 0, so a2k=0a_{2k} = 0 for all kk (each even coefficient is a multiple of the previous even coefficient, which starts at 0).

For odd indices: a1=1a_1 = 1, and an+2=n+1n+2ana_{n+2} = \frac{n+1}{n+2} a_n.

a3=23a1=23a_3 = \frac{2}{3} a_1 = \frac{2}{3}.

a5=45a3=4523=815a_5 = \frac{4}{5} a_3 = \frac{4}{5}\cdot\frac{2}{3} = \frac{8}{15}.

a7=67a5=67815=48105=1635a_7 = \frac{6}{7} a_5 = \frac{6}{7}\cdot\frac{8}{15} = \frac{48}{105} = \frac{16}{35}.

In general, for n=2r+1n = 2r+1 (where r0r \geq 0), we get by iterating a2r+1=2r2r+1a2r1a_{2r+1} = \frac{2r}{2r+1} a_{2r-1}:

a2r+1=2r2r+12r22r123a1=(2r)!!(2r+1)!!.a_{2r+1} = \frac{2r}{2r+1} \cdot \frac{2r-2}{2r-1} \cdots \frac{2}{3} \cdot a_1 = \frac{(2r)!!}{(2r+1)!!}.

Here (2r)!!=246(2r)=2rr!(2r)!! = 2 \cdot 4 \cdot 6 \cdots (2r) = 2^r r! and (2r+1)!!=135(2r+1)=(2r+1)!2rr!(2r+1)!! = 1 \cdot 3 \cdot 5 \cdots (2r+1) = \frac{(2r+1)!}{2^r r!}.

Therefore:

a2r+1=2rr!(2r+1)!2rr!=22r(r!)2(2r+1)!.a_{2r+1} = \frac{2^r r!}{\frac{(2r+1)!}{2^r r!}} = \frac{2^{2r}(r!)^2}{(2r+1)!}.

So the Maclaurin series is:

y=r=022r(r!)2(2r+1)!x2r+1=x+223!x3+22425!x5+2242627!x7+y = \sum_{r=0}^{\infty} \frac{2^{2r}(r!)^2}{(2r+1)!} x^{2r+1} = x + \frac{2^2}{3!}x^3 + \frac{2^2 \cdot 4^2}{5!}x^5 + \frac{2^2 \cdot 4^2 \cdot 6^2}{7!}x^7 + \cdots

and all even-power coefficients are zero.

Evaluating the infinite sum:

The given sum is:

S=1+13!+225!+22×327!++22×32××n2(2n+1)!+S = 1 + \frac{1}{3!} + \frac{2^2}{5!} + \frac{2^2 \times 3^2}{7!} + \cdots + \frac{2^2 \times 3^2 \times \cdots \times n^2}{(2n+1)!} + \cdots

Note that 22×32××n2(2n+1)!=(n!)2(2n+1)!\frac{2^2 \times 3^2 \times \cdots \times n^2}{(2n+1)!} = \frac{(n!)^2}{(2n+1)!} (since the numerator 2232n2=(n!)2/12=(n!)22^2 \cdot 3^2 \cdots n^2 = (n!)^2 / 1^2 = (n!)^2… wait, let me reconsider).

Actually 22×32××n2=(23n)2=(n!)22^2 \times 3^2 \times \cdots \times n^2 = (2 \cdot 3 \cdots n)^2 = (n!)^2 (since 12=11^2 = 1 is omitted). Hmm, but the first term is 1, which corresponds to n=0n=0: (0!)21!=1\frac{(0!)^2}{1!} = 1. And 13!\frac{1}{3!} corresponds to n=1n=1: (1!)23!=16\frac{(1!)^2}{3!} = \frac{1}{6}. And 225!\frac{2^2}{5!} corresponds to n=2n=2: (2!)25!=4120\frac{(2!)^2}{5!} = \frac{4}{120}.

So S=n=0(n!)2(2n+1)!S = \sum_{n=0}^{\infty} \frac{(n!)^2}{(2n+1)!}.

Now compare with the Maclaurin series yx=r=022r(r!)2(2r+1)!x2r\frac{y}{x} = \sum_{r=0}^{\infty} \frac{2^{2r}(r!)^2}{(2r+1)!} x^{2r}.

At x=12x = \frac{1}{2}:

yxx=12=r=022r(r!)2(2r+1)!122r=r=0(r!)2(2r+1)!=S.\frac{y}{x}\bigg|_{x=\frac{1}{2}} = \sum_{r=0}^{\infty} \frac{2^{2r}(r!)^2}{(2r+1)!} \cdot \frac{1}{2^{2r}} = \sum_{r=0}^{\infty} \frac{(r!)^2}{(2r+1)!} = S.

Now y=arcsinx1x2y = \frac{\arcsin x}{\sqrt{1-x^2}}, so:

S=y(1/2)1/2=2arcsin12114=2π632=π332=2π33=2π39.S = \frac{y(1/2)}{1/2} = 2 \cdot \frac{\arcsin\frac{1}{2}}{\sqrt{1-\frac{1}{4}}} = \frac{2 \cdot \frac{\pi}{6}}{\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}} = \frac{\frac{\pi}{3}}{\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}} = \frac{2\pi}{3\sqrt{3}} = \frac{2\pi\sqrt{3}}{9}.

Examiner Notes

This was the second most popular question, attempted by six out of every seven candidates, with only marginally less success than its predecessor. The first differential equation was proved correctly and many successfully completed the general result by induction, although there were some problems with the initial case. Some had difficulty finding the correct coefficients for the odd powers of xx in the Maclaurin series but the last part produced a variety of errors and few correct answers. Such errors included sin112=π3\sin^{-1} \frac{1}{2} = \frac{\pi}{3}, forgetting to divide yy by xx, and attempting to evaluate the series using x=1x = 1.


Topic: 向量与几何 Vectors and Geometry  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

3 The four vertices PiP_i (i=1,2,3,4i = 1, 2, 3, 4) of a regular tetrahedron lie on the surface of a sphere with centre at OO and of radius 1. The position vector of PiP_i with respect to OO is pi\mathbf{p}_i (i=1,2,3,4i = 1, 2, 3, 4). Use the fact that p1+p2+p3+p4=0\mathbf{p}_1 + \mathbf{p}_2 + \mathbf{p}_3 + \mathbf{p}_4 = \mathbf{0} to show that pipj=13\mathbf{p}_i \cdot \mathbf{p}_j = -\frac{1}{3} for iji \neq j.

Let XX be any point on the surface of the sphere, and let XPiXP_i denote the length of the line joining XX and PiP_i (i=1,2,3,4i = 1, 2, 3, 4).

(i) By writing (XPi)2(XP_i)^2 as (pix)(pix)(\mathbf{p}_i - \mathbf{x}) \cdot (\mathbf{p}_i - \mathbf{x}), where x\mathbf{x} is the position vector of XX with respect to OO, show that i=14(XPi)2=8.\sum_{i=1}^{4} (XP_i)^2 = 8.

(ii) Given that P1P_1 has coordinates (0,0,1)(0, 0, 1) and that the coordinates of P2P_2 are of the form (a,0,b)(a, 0, b), where a>0a > 0, show that a=22/3a = 2\sqrt{2}/3 and b=1/3b = -1/3, and find the coordinates of P3P_3 and P4P_4.

(iii) Show that i=14(XPi)4=4i=14(1xpi)2.\sum_{i=1}^{4} (XP_i)^4 = 4 \sum_{i=1}^{4} (1 - \mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i)^2.

By letting the coordinates of XX be (x,y,z)(x, y, z), show further that i=14(XPi)4\sum_{i=1}^{4} (XP_i)^4 is independent of the position of XX.

Hint
  1. The scalar product of pip_i with pr\sum p_r, which is of course zero, can be expanded giving pipi=1p_i \cdot p_i = 1 and three products pipjp_i \cdot p_j which are equal by symmetry, giving the required result. Expanding the expression suggested in (i), gives i=14(pipi2xpi+xx)\sum_{i=1}^{4} (p_i \cdot p_i - 2x \cdot p_i + x \cdot x), which, bearing in mind that pipi=1p_i \cdot p_i = 1, xx=1x \cdot x = 1, and that xi=14pi=0x \cdot \sum_{i=1}^{4} p_i = 0, gives the correct result. Considering that p1p2=13p_1 \cdot p_2 = -\frac{1}{3}, p2p2=1p_2 \cdot p_2 = 1, and that aa is positive, enables the given values to be found. Similarly p1p3=13p_1 \cdot p_3 = -\frac{1}{3}, p2p3=13p_2 \cdot p_3 = -\frac{1}{3}, and p3p3=1p_3 \cdot p_3 = 1 yields P3,P4=(23,±23,13)P_3, P_4 = \left( -\frac{\sqrt{2}}{3}, \pm \frac{\sqrt{2}}{\sqrt{3}}, -\frac{1}{3} \right). In (iii), using the logic of (i), (XPi)4=((pix)(pix))2=4(1xpi)2(XP_i)^4 = ((p_i - x) \cdot (p_i - x))^2 = 4(1 - x \cdot p_i)^2, as required. Expanding this, and using the coordinates of XX and those of PiP_i that have been found,

i=14(XPi)4=16+4(z2+(223x13z)2+(23x+23y13z)2+(23x23y13z)2)\sum_{i=1}^{4} (XP_i)^4 = 16 + 4 \left( z^2 + \left( \frac{2\sqrt{2}}{3} x - \frac{1}{3} z \right)^2 + \left( -\frac{\sqrt{2}}{3} x + \frac{\sqrt{2}}{\sqrt{3}} y - \frac{1}{3} z \right)^2 + \left( -\frac{\sqrt{2}}{3} x - \frac{\sqrt{2}}{\sqrt{3}} y - \frac{1}{3} z \right)^2 \right)

=16+4(43x2+43y2+43z2)=643= 16 + 4 \left( \frac{4}{3} x^2 + \frac{4}{3} y^2 + \frac{4}{3} z^2 \right) = \frac{64}{3} which is sufficient.

Model Solution

Showing pipj=13\mathbf{p}_i \cdot \mathbf{p}_j = -\frac{1}{3} for iji \neq j:

Since P1,P2,P3,P4P_1, P_2, P_3, P_4 form a regular tetrahedron on a sphere of radius 1, by symmetry the dot product pipj\mathbf{p}_i \cdot \mathbf{p}_j is the same for all iji \neq j. Taking the dot product of p1\mathbf{p}_1 with p1+p2+p3+p4=0\mathbf{p}_1 + \mathbf{p}_2 + \mathbf{p}_3 + \mathbf{p}_4 = \mathbf{0}:

p1p1+p1p2+p1p3+p1p4=0\mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_1 + \mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_2 + \mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_3 + \mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_4 = 0

Since p12=1|\mathbf{p}_1|^2 = 1 and p1pj\mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_j is the same for j=2,3,4j = 2, 3, 4:

1+3(p1p2)=0    pipj=13 for ij.1 + 3(\mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_2) = 0 \implies \mathbf{p}_i \cdot \mathbf{p}_j = -\frac{1}{3} \text{ for } i \neq j. \qquad \square


Part (i)

Expanding (XPi)2=(pix)(pix)(XP_i)^2 = (\mathbf{p}_i - \mathbf{x}) \cdot (\mathbf{p}_i - \mathbf{x}):

(XPi)2=pipi2xpi+xx=12xpi+1=22xpi(XP_i)^2 = \mathbf{p}_i \cdot \mathbf{p}_i - 2\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i + \mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{x} = 1 - 2\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i + 1 = 2 - 2\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i

Summing over i=1,2,3,4i = 1, 2, 3, 4:

i=14(XPi)2=i=14(22xpi)=82xi=14pi=82x0=8.\sum_{i=1}^{4} (XP_i)^2 = \sum_{i=1}^{4} (2 - 2\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i) = 8 - 2\mathbf{x} \cdot \sum_{i=1}^{4} \mathbf{p}_i = 8 - 2\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{0} = 8. \qquad \square


Part (ii)

Given P1=(0,0,1)P_1 = (0, 0, 1) and P2=(a,0,b)P_2 = (a, 0, b) with a>0a > 0.

From p1p2=13\mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_2 = -\frac{1}{3}: 0+0+b=13\quad 0 + 0 + b = -\frac{1}{3}, so b=13b = -\frac{1}{3}.

From p22=1|\mathbf{p}_2|^2 = 1: a2+19=1\quad a^2 + \frac{1}{9} = 1, so a2=89a^2 = \frac{8}{9}, giving a=223a = \frac{2\sqrt{2}}{3} (since a>0a > 0). \qquad \square

For P3=(c,d,e)P_3 = (c, d, e), we need p32=1|\mathbf{p}_3|^2 = 1, p1p3=13\mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_3 = -\frac{1}{3}, and p2p3=13\mathbf{p}_2 \cdot \mathbf{p}_3 = -\frac{1}{3}.

From p1p3=13\mathbf{p}_1 \cdot \mathbf{p}_3 = -\frac{1}{3}: e=13\quad e = -\frac{1}{3}.

From p32=1|\mathbf{p}_3|^2 = 1: c2+d2=89\quad c^2 + d^2 = \frac{8}{9}.

From p2p3=13\mathbf{p}_2 \cdot \mathbf{p}_3 = -\frac{1}{3}: 223c+(13)(13)=13\quad \frac{2\sqrt{2}}{3}c + (-\frac{1}{3})(-\frac{1}{3}) = -\frac{1}{3}, so 223c+19=13\frac{2\sqrt{2}}{3}c + \frac{1}{9} = -\frac{1}{3}, giving 223c=49\frac{2\sqrt{2}}{3}c = -\frac{4}{9}, hence c=23c = -\frac{\sqrt{2}}{3}.

From c2+d2=89c^2 + d^2 = \frac{8}{9}: 29+d2=89\quad \frac{2}{9} + d^2 = \frac{8}{9}, so d2=23d^2 = \frac{2}{3}, giving d=±63d = \pm\frac{\sqrt{6}}{3}.

By the symmetry of the regular tetrahedron, we take:

P3=(23,  63,  13),P4=(23,  63,  13).P_3 = \left(-\frac{\sqrt{2}}{3},\; \frac{\sqrt{6}}{3},\; -\frac{1}{3}\right), \qquad P_4 = \left(-\frac{\sqrt{2}}{3},\; -\frac{\sqrt{6}}{3},\; -\frac{1}{3}\right).

One can verify p3p4=2969+19=39=13\mathbf{p}_3 \cdot \mathbf{p}_4 = \frac{2}{9} - \frac{6}{9} + \frac{1}{9} = -\frac{3}{9} = -\frac{1}{3}. \qquad \square


Part (iii)

Since (XPi)2=22xpi=2(1xpi)(XP_i)^2 = 2 - 2\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i = 2(1 - \mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i), we have:

(XPi)4=4(1xpi)2.(XP_i)^4 = 4(1 - \mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i)^2.

Therefore:

i=14(XPi)4=4i=14(1xpi)2.\sum_{i=1}^{4} (XP_i)^4 = 4\sum_{i=1}^{4} (1 - \mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i)^2. \qquad \square

Expanding:

i=14(1xpi)2=42xi=14pi+i=14(xpi)2=4+i=14(xpi)2\sum_{i=1}^{4} (1 - \mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i)^2 = 4 - 2\mathbf{x} \cdot \sum_{i=1}^{4} \mathbf{p}_i + \sum_{i=1}^{4} (\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i)^2 = 4 + \sum_{i=1}^{4} (\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i)^2

since pi=0\sum \mathbf{p}_i = \mathbf{0}. With x=(x,y,z)\mathbf{x} = (x, y, z):

xp1=z\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_1 = z

xp2=223x13z\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_2 = \frac{2\sqrt{2}}{3}x - \frac{1}{3}z

xp3=23x+63y13z\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_3 = -\frac{\sqrt{2}}{3}x + \frac{\sqrt{6}}{3}y - \frac{1}{3}z

xp4=23x63y13z\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_4 = -\frac{\sqrt{2}}{3}x - \frac{\sqrt{6}}{3}y - \frac{1}{3}z

Squaring and summing. The cross terms in xzxz cancel between P2P_2 and P3+P4P_3 + P_4, and the cross terms in yzyz cancel between P3P_3 and P4P_4:

(xp3)2+(xp4)2=2(29x2+23y2+19z2)=49x2+43y2+29z2(\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_3)^2 + (\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_4)^2 = 2\left(\frac{2}{9}x^2 + \frac{2}{3}y^2 + \frac{1}{9}z^2\right) = \frac{4}{9}x^2 + \frac{4}{3}y^2 + \frac{2}{9}z^2

(xp2)2=89x2429xz+19z2(\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_2)^2 = \frac{8}{9}x^2 - \frac{4\sqrt{2}}{9}xz + \frac{1}{9}z^2

Adding all four terms (the xzxz terms from P2P_2 and P3+P4P_3 + P_4 cancel):

i=14(xpi)2=(89+49)x2+43y2+(1+19+29)z2=43x2+43y2+43z2=43(x2+y2+z2)=43\sum_{i=1}^{4} (\mathbf{x} \cdot \mathbf{p}_i)^2 = \left(\frac{8}{9} + \frac{4}{9}\right)x^2 + \frac{4}{3}y^2 + \left(1 + \frac{1}{9} + \frac{2}{9}\right)z^2 = \frac{4}{3}x^2 + \frac{4}{3}y^2 + \frac{4}{3}z^2 = \frac{4}{3}(x^2 + y^2 + z^2) = \frac{4}{3}

since XX lies on the unit sphere. Therefore:

i=14(XPi)4=4(4+43)=4163=643\sum_{i=1}^{4} (XP_i)^4 = 4\left(4 + \frac{4}{3}\right) = 4 \cdot \frac{16}{3} = \frac{64}{3}

which is independent of the position of XX. \qquad \square

Examiner Notes
  1. Most that attempted this question managed to achieve the first two results successfully, unless they got the diagram wrong. However, the final result was found trickier as some forgot to include the gravitational potential energy, some failed to evaluate the correct elastic potential energy and there were many mistakes made handling the surds.

Topic: 复数 Complex Numbers  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

4 Show that (zeiθ)(zeiθ)=z22zcosθ+1(z - \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta})(z - \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta}) = z^2 - 2z \cos \theta + 1.

Write down the (2n)(2n)th roots of 1-1 in the form eiθ\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta}, where π<θπ-\pi < \theta \leqslant \pi, and deduce that z2n+1=k=1n(z22zcos((2k1)π2n)+1).z^{2n} + 1 = \prod_{k=1}^{n} \left( z^2 - 2z \cos \left( \frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} \right) + 1 \right).

Here, nn is a positive integer, and the \prod notation denotes the product.

(i) By substituting z=iz = \mathrm{i} show that, when nn is even, cos(π2n)cos(3π2n)cos(5π2n)cos((2n1)π2n)=(1)12n21n.\cos \left( \frac{\pi}{2n} \right) \cos \left( \frac{3\pi}{2n} \right) \cos \left( \frac{5\pi}{2n} \right) \cdots \cos \left( \frac{(2n-1)\pi}{2n} \right) = (-1)^{\frac{1}{2}n} 2^{1-n}.

(ii) Show that, when nn is odd, cos2(π2n)cos2(3π2n)cos2(5π2n)cos2((n2)π2n)=n21n.\cos^2 \left( \frac{\pi}{2n} \right) \cos^2 \left( \frac{3\pi}{2n} \right) \cos^2 \left( \frac{5\pi}{2n} \right) \cdots \cos^2 \left( \frac{(n-2)\pi}{2n} \right) = n 2^{1-n}.

You may use without proof the fact that 1+z2n=(1+z2)(1z2+z4+z2n2)1 + z^{2n} = (1 + z^2)(1 - z^2 + z^4 - \cdots + z^{2n-2}) when nn is odd.

Hint
  1. The initial result is obtained by expanding the brackets and expressing the exponentials in trigonometric form. The (2n)(2n)th roots of -1 are ei2m+12nπe^{i \frac{2m+1}{2n} \pi}, nmn1-n \le m \le n - 1, which lead to the factors of z2n+1z^{2n} + 1 and these paired using the initial result give the required result. Part (i) follows directly from substituting z=iz = i in the previous result, and as nn is even, z2n+1=2z^{2n} + 1 = 2. Using the given factorisation in part (ii), the general result can be simplified by the factor

z22zcosn2nπ+1=z2+1z^2 - 2z \cos \frac{n}{2n} \pi + 1 = z^2 + 1. Again substituting z=iz = i, and that cos2nr2nπ=cosr2nπ\cos \frac{2n-r}{2n} \pi = -\cos \frac{r}{2n} \pi gives the evaluation required.

Model Solution

Showing (zeiθ)(zeiθ)=z22zcosθ+1(z - \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta})(z - \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta}) = z^2 - 2z\cos\theta + 1:

(zeiθ)(zeiθ)=z2z(eiθ+eiθ)+eiθeiθ=z22zcosθ+1.(z - \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta})(z - \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta}) = z^2 - z(\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta} + \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta}) + \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta}\mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta} = z^2 - 2z\cos\theta + 1. \qquad \square

Finding the (2n)(2n)th roots of 1-1:

We solve z2n=1=ei(π+2mπ)z^{2n} = -1 = \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}(\pi + 2m\pi)} for integer mm, giving:

z=ei(2m+1)π/(2n).z = \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}(2m+1)\pi/(2n)}.

To obtain 2n2n distinct roots with π<θπ-\pi < \theta \leqslant \pi, we take m=n,n+1,,n1m = -n, -n+1, \ldots, n-1. These give angles θm=(2m+1)π2n\theta_m = \frac{(2m+1)\pi}{2n} ranging from π+π2n-\pi + \frac{\pi}{2n} to ππ2n\pi - \frac{\pi}{2n}, all lying in (π,π)(-\pi, \pi).

Since z2n+1z^{2n} + 1 has real coefficients, its roots come in conjugate pairs. The root for mm and the root for m=(m+1)m' = -(m+1) are conjugates: θm=θm\theta_{m'} = -\theta_m. Pairing m=0m = 0 with m=1m = -1, m=1m = 1 with m=2m = -2, and in general m=km = k with m=(k+1)m = -(k+1) for k=0,1,,n1k = 0, 1, \ldots, n-1, we obtain nn pairs with angles (2k+1)π2n\frac{(2k+1)\pi}{2n} for k=0,1,,n1k = 0, 1, \ldots, n-1, i.e. π2n,3π2n,,(2n1)π2n\frac{\pi}{2n}, \frac{3\pi}{2n}, \ldots, \frac{(2n-1)\pi}{2n}.

Each conjugate pair gives a quadratic factor (zeiθ)(zeiθ)=z22zcosθ+1(z - \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta})(z - \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta}) = z^2 - 2z\cos\theta + 1. Therefore:

z2n+1=k=1n(z22zcos(2k1)π2n+1).z^{2n} + 1 = \prod_{k=1}^{n}\left(z^2 - 2z\cos\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} + 1\right). \qquad \square


Part (i): nn even

Substituting z=iz = \mathrm{i} into the factorization:

Left side: i2n+1=(i2)n+1=(1)n+1=2\mathrm{i}^{2n} + 1 = (\mathrm{i}^2)^n + 1 = (-1)^n + 1 = 2 since nn is even.

Right side: each factor becomes i22icosθk+1=2icosθk\mathrm{i}^2 - 2\mathrm{i}\cos\theta_k + 1 = -2\mathrm{i}\cos\theta_k.

Using the exponential form 2cosθk=eiθk+eiθk2\cos\theta_k = \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta_k} + \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta_k}:

i22icosθk+1=i(eiθk+eiθk)=ieiθk(1+e2iθk).\mathrm{i}^2 - 2\mathrm{i}\cos\theta_k + 1 = -\mathrm{i}(\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta_k} + \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta_k}) = -\mathrm{i}\,\mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta_k}(1 + \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\theta_k}).

Therefore:

k=1n(ieiθk)=(i)neiθk=(i)n1\prod_{k=1}^{n}(-\mathrm{i}\,\mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\theta_k}) = (-\mathrm{i})^n \cdot \mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\sum\theta_k} = (-\mathrm{i})^n \cdot 1

since k=1nθk=π2nk=1n(2k1)=π2nn2=nπ2\sum_{k=1}^{n}\theta_k = \frac{\pi}{2n}\sum_{k=1}^{n}(2k-1) = \frac{\pi}{2n} \cdot n^2 = \frac{n\pi}{2}, and einπ/2=(eiπ/2)n=(i)n\mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}n\pi/2} = (\mathrm{e}^{-\mathrm{i}\pi/2})^n = (-\mathrm{i})^n, so this combines with (i)n(-\mathrm{i})^n to give (i)2n=((i)2)n=(1)n=1(-\mathrm{i})^{2n} = ((-\mathrm{i})^2)^n = (-1)^n = 1.

Wait, let me recompute. The product of all factors is:

k=1n(2icosθk)=(2i)nk=1ncosθk.\prod_{k=1}^{n}(-2\mathrm{i}\cos\theta_k) = (-2\mathrm{i})^n \prod_{k=1}^{n}\cos\theta_k.

For even n=2mn = 2m: (2i)2m=((2i)2)m=(4)m=(1)m4m=(1)m22m=(1)n/22n(-2\mathrm{i})^{2m} = ((-2\mathrm{i})^2)^m = (-4)^m = (-1)^m \cdot 4^m = (-1)^m \cdot 2^{2m} = (-1)^{n/2} \cdot 2^n.

Setting left side equal to right side:

2=(1)n/22nk=1ncos(2k1)π2n2 = (-1)^{n/2} \cdot 2^n \prod_{k=1}^{n}\cos\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n}

k=1ncos(2k1)π2n=2(1)n/22n=(1)n/221n.\prod_{k=1}^{n}\cos\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} = \frac{2}{(-1)^{n/2} \cdot 2^n} = (-1)^{n/2} \cdot 2^{1-n}. \qquad \square


Part (ii): nn odd

Using the given factorization 1+z2n=(1+z2)(1z2+z4+z2n2)1 + z^{2n} = (1 + z^2)(1 - z^2 + z^4 - \cdots + z^{2n-2}).

At z=iz = \mathrm{i}: left side =1+(1)n=0= 1 + (-1)^n = 0 (since nn is odd), and 1+i2=01 + \mathrm{i}^2 = 0, so both sides are zero.

The right side factor z22zcos(2k1)π2n+1z^2 - 2z\cos\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} + 1 equals z2+1z^2 + 1 when cos(2k1)π2n=0\cos\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} = 0, which occurs when (2k1)π2n=π2\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} = \frac{\pi}{2}, i.e. k=n+12k = \frac{n+1}{2} (an integer since nn is odd).

So the factor with k=n+12k = \frac{n+1}{2} is exactly z2+1z^2 + 1. Removing this factor:

Q(z):=z2n+1z2+1=1z2+z4+z2n2=k=1k(n+1)/2n(z22zcos(2k1)π2n+1).Q(z) := \frac{z^{2n}+1}{z^2+1} = 1 - z^2 + z^4 - \cdots + z^{2n-2} = \prod_{\substack{k=1 \\ k \neq (n+1)/2}}^{n}\left(z^2 - 2z\cos\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} + 1\right).

The remaining n1n - 1 factors pair into conjugate pairs (since the quadratic factors for kk and nk+1n - k + 1 are conjugates, as cos(2(nk+1)1)π2n=cos(2k1)π2n\cos\frac{(2(n-k+1)-1)\pi}{2n} = -\cos\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n}). There are n12\frac{n-1}{2} such pairs.

Substituting z=iz = \mathrm{i} into QQ:

Left side: Q(i)=1(1)+1(1)++1=nQ(\mathrm{i}) = 1 - (-1) + 1 - (-1) + \cdots + 1 = n (since nn is odd, there are nn terms all equal to +1+1).

Right side: each quadratic factor at z=iz = \mathrm{i} gives 2icos(2k1)π2n-2\mathrm{i}\cos\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n}. The product over the pair (k,nk+1)(k, n-k+1) gives:

(2icosθk)(2icos(πθk))=(2icosθk)(2icosθk)=4cos2θk.(-2\mathrm{i}\cos\theta_k)(-2\mathrm{i}\cos(\pi - \theta_k)) = (-2\mathrm{i}\cos\theta_k)(2\mathrm{i}\cos\theta_k) = 4\cos^2\theta_k.

The product over all n12\frac{n-1}{2} pairs is:

k=1(n1)/24cos2(2k1)π2n=2n1k=1(n1)/2cos2(2k1)π2n.\prod_{k=1}^{(n-1)/2} 4\cos^2\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} = 2^{n-1}\prod_{k=1}^{(n-1)/2}\cos^2\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n}.

Setting left side equal to right side:

n=2n1k=1(n1)/2cos2(2k1)π2nn = 2^{n-1}\prod_{k=1}^{(n-1)/2}\cos^2\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n}

k=1(n1)/2cos2(2k1)π2n=n21n.\prod_{k=1}^{(n-1)/2}\cos^2\frac{(2k-1)\pi}{2n} = n \cdot 2^{1-n}. \qquad \square

Examiner Notes
  1. Many candidates tried to write z=x+iyz = x + iy or similar and likewise for ww and then tried to expand which involved a lot more work than dealing with conjugates directly. Some tried to use the cosine rule rather than the triangle inequality from the diagram. In general, the first result and parts (i) and (ii) were well done but only the strongest candidates did better than pick up the odd mark here and there in trying to obtain the inequality. A lot of mistakes were made mishandling inequalities, but even those who could do this correctly overlooked the necessity of substantiating that th4 square roots are positive and that the denominator is non-zero.

Topic: 数论 Number Theory  |  Difficulty: Hard  |  Marks: 20

5 In this question, you may assume that, if aa, bb and cc are positive integers such that aa and bb are coprime and aa divides bcbc, then aa divides cc. (Two positive integers are said to be coprime if their highest common factor is 1.)

(i) Suppose that there are positive integers pp, qq, nn and NN such that pp and qq are coprime and qnN=pnq^n N = p^n. Show that N=kpnN = k p^n for some positive integer kk and deduce the value of qq.

Hence prove that, for any positive integers nn and NN, Nn\sqrt[n]{N} is either a positive integer or irrational.

(ii) Suppose that there are positive integers aa, bb, cc and dd such that aa and bb are coprime and cc and dd are coprime, and aadb=bacba^a d^b = b^a c^b. Prove that db=bad^b = b^a and deduce that, if pp is a prime factor of dd, then pp is also a prime factor of bb.

If pmp^m and pnp^n are the highest powers of the prime number pp that divide dd and bb, respectively, express bb in terms of aa, mm and nn and hence show that pnnp^n \leqslant n. Deduce the value of bb. (You may assume that if x>0x > 0 and y2y \geqslant 2 then yx>xy^x > x.)

Hence prove that, if rr is a positive rational number such that rrr^r is rational, then rr is a positive integer.

Hint
  1. Writing qnNq^n N as qqn1Nq q^{n-1} N, and employing the permitted assumption, as pp and qq are coprime, pp divides qn1Nq^{n-1} N. Repetitions of this argument imply finally that pp divides NN. Letting N=pQ1N = p Q_1, qnQ1=pn1q^n Q_1 = p^{n-1}. Continuing this argument similarly gives the result N=kpnN = k p^n. As a consequence, qnk=1q^n k = 1, and thus qq and kk must both be
Model Solution

Part (i)

We are given positive integers p,q,n,Np, q, n, N with gcd(p,q)=1\gcd(p, q) = 1 and qnN=pnq^n N = p^n.

Showing N=kpnN = kp^n:

Since qnN=pnq^n N = p^n, we have pnqnNp^n \mid q^n N. Because gcd(p,q)=1\gcd(p, q) = 1, we know gcd(pn,qn)=1\gcd(p^n, q^n) = 1 (any prime dividing pnp^n divides pp, and since gcd(p,q)=1\gcd(p,q) = 1 it does not divide qq, hence does not divide qnq^n). By the assumed result (applied with a=pna = p^n, b=qnb = q^n, c=Nc = N), since gcd(pn,qn)=1\gcd(p^n, q^n) = 1 and pnqnNp^n \mid q^n N, we conclude pnNp^n \mid N.

Therefore N=kpnN = kp^n for some positive integer kk.

Deducing qq:

Substituting N=kpnN = kp^n into qnN=pnq^n N = p^n:

qnkpn=pnq^n \cdot kp^n = p^n

Dividing both sides by pn>0p^n > 0:

qnk=1q^n k = 1

Since qq and kk are positive integers, qn1q^n \geqslant 1 and k1k \geqslant 1. The only way their product equals 1 is if qn=1q^n = 1 and k=1k = 1. Since qq is a positive integer, qn=1q^n = 1 gives q=1q = 1.

Proving Nn\sqrt[n]{N} is either a positive integer or irrational:

We prove the contrapositive: if Nn\sqrt[n]{N} is a positive rational number that is not an integer, we reach a contradiction.

Suppose Nn=pq\sqrt[n]{N} = \frac{p}{q} where p,qp, q are positive integers with gcd(p,q)=1\gcd(p, q) = 1 and q>1q > 1 (i.e.\ Nn\sqrt[n]{N} is rational but not an integer). Raising both sides to the nn-th power:

N=pnqn    qnN=pnN = \frac{p^n}{q^n} \implies q^n N = p^n

This satisfies the conditions of the first part, so we deduce q=1q = 1. But we assumed q>1q > 1, a contradiction.

Therefore Nn\sqrt[n]{N} is either a positive integer or irrational. \blacksquare

Part (ii)

We are given positive integers a,b,c,da, b, c, d with gcd(a,b)=1\gcd(a, b) = 1 and gcd(c,d)=1\gcd(c, d) = 1, and aadb=bacba^a d^b = b^a c^b.

Proving db=bad^b = b^a:

From aadb=bacba^a d^b = b^a c^b, since bab^a divides the right-hand side, baaadbb^a \mid a^a d^b.

Since gcd(a,b)=1\gcd(a, b) = 1, we have gcd(aa,ba)=1\gcd(a^a, b^a) = 1 (any prime dividing bab^a divides bb, and since gcd(a,b)=1\gcd(a,b) = 1 it does not divide aa, hence does not divide aaa^a). By the assumed result (with a=baa = b^a, b=aab = a^a, c=dbc = d^b), since gcd(ba,aa)=1\gcd(b^a, a^a) = 1 and baaadbb^a \mid a^a d^b, we get badbb^a \mid d^b.

So db=kbad^b = k \cdot b^a for some positive integer kk.

Similarly, from aadb=bacba^a d^b = b^a c^b, since aaa^a divides the left-hand side, aabacba^a \mid b^a c^b. By the same argument (with roles swapped), since gcd(aa,ba)=1\gcd(a^a, b^a) = 1 and aabacba^a \mid b^a c^b, we get aacba^a \mid c^b, so cb=kaac^b = k' \cdot a^a for some positive integer kk'.

Substituting into aadb=bacba^a d^b = b^a c^b:

aakba=bakaaa^a \cdot k b^a = b^a \cdot k' a^a

Dividing both sides by aabaa^a b^a:

k=kk = k'

So db=kbad^b = k b^a and cb=kaac^b = k a^a.

Now we use gcd(c,d)=1\gcd(c, d) = 1. Any prime pp dividing kk must divide db=kbad^b = kb^a and cb=kaac^b = ka^a. Since pdbp \mid d^b and pp is prime, pdp \mid d. Similarly pcbp \mid c^b implies pcp \mid c. But gcd(c,d)=1\gcd(c, d) = 1, so no prime can divide both cc and dd. Therefore kk has no prime factors, meaning k=1k = 1.

Hence db=bad^b = b^a (and cb=aac^b = a^a). \blacksquare

Deducing that prime factors of dd are prime factors of bb:

If pp is a prime factor of dd, then pdp \mid d, so pbdb=bap^b \mid d^b = b^a. Since pbap \mid b^a and pp is prime, pbp \mid b.

Therefore every prime factor of dd is also a prime factor of bb. \blacksquare

Expressing bb and showing pnnp^n \leqslant n:

Let pmdp^m \| d and pnbp^n \| b (meaning pmp^m is the highest power of pp dividing dd, and pnp^n is the highest power of pp dividing bb, where m1m \geqslant 1 since pdp \mid d). Then pmbdbp^{mb} \| d^b and pnabap^{na} \| b^a. Since db=bad^b = b^a:

mb=na()mb = na \qquad \qquad (\dagger)

Since gcd(a,b)=1\gcd(a, b) = 1 and bnab \mid na, we have bnb \mid n (because bb and aa share no common factor). So n=lbn = lb for some positive integer ll, giving:

b=nlnb = \frac{n}{l} \leqslant n

Since pnbp^n \| b, we have pnbp^n \leqslant b, hence:

pnnp^n \leqslant n

Deducing bb:

We have pnnp^n \leqslant n where pp is prime (so p2p \geqslant 2).

If n1n \geqslant 1: by the given result with x=n>0x = n > 0 and y=22y = 2 \geqslant 2, we have 2n>n2^n > n. Since p2p \geqslant 2, pn2n>np^n \geqslant 2^n > n, contradicting pnnp^n \leqslant n.

Therefore n=0n = 0, meaning pnbp^n \| b with n=0n = 0 for every prime pp. But pnbp^n \| b with n=0n = 0 means pbp \nmid b. Since this holds for every prime pp (recall every prime factor of dd is a prime factor of bb, and we have shown no such prime can divide bb with a positive power), bb has no prime factors. Since bb is a positive integer, b=1b = 1.

Proving that if rr is a positive rational with rrr^r rational, then rr is a positive integer:

Let r=abr = \frac{a}{b} in lowest terms (so gcd(a,b)=1\gcd(a, b) = 1, a,ba, b positive integers), with rr=cdr^r = \frac{c}{d} also in lowest terms (so gcd(c,d)=1\gcd(c, d) = 1). Then:

(ab)a/b=cd\left(\frac{a}{b}\right)^{a/b} = \frac{c}{d}

Raising both sides to the power bb:

(ab)a=(cd)b    aaba=cbdb    aadb=bacb\left(\frac{a}{b}\right)^{a} = \left(\frac{c}{d}\right)^{b} \implies \frac{a^a}{b^a} = \frac{c^b}{d^b} \implies a^a d^b = b^a c^b

This satisfies the conditions of part (ii) (gcd(a,b)=1\gcd(a,b) = 1, gcd(c,d)=1\gcd(c,d) = 1, aadb=bacba^a d^b = b^a c^b), so by part (ii), b=1b = 1.

Therefore r=ar = a is a positive integer. \blacksquare

Examiner Notes

Nearly as many attempted this as question 4, but only achieving a quarter of the marks making it the least successfully answered question. Almost all missed the point of the question given in the first sentence, and made other assumptions, which frequently only applied to primes rather than integers in general. As a consequence, most did not satisfactorily justify their results.

They generally fared better tackling the second part of (i), though some tried to prove the statement in the wrong direction. They approached (ii) better though few gave a valid argument why pnnp^n \le n.


Topic: 复数 Complex Numbers  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

6 Let zz and ww be complex numbers. Use a diagram to show that zwz+w|z - w| \leqslant |z| + |w|.

For any complex numbers zz and ww, EE is defined by

E=zw+zw+2zw.E = z w^* + z^* w + 2 |z w| .

(i) Show that zw2=(z+w)2E|z - w|^2 = (|z| + |w|)^2 - E, and deduce that EE is real and non-negative.

(ii) Show that 1zw2=(1+zw)2E|1 - z w^*|^2 = (1 + |z w|)^2 - E.

Hence show that, if both z>1|z| > 1 and w>1|w| > 1, then

zw1zwz+w1+zw.\frac{|z - w|}{|1 - z w^*|} \leqslant \frac{|z| + |w|}{1 + |z w|} .

Does this inequality also hold if both z<1|z| < 1 and w<1|w| < 1?

Hint
  1. The opening result is the triangle inequality applied to OW, OZ, and WZ where OW and OZ are represented by the complex numbers w and z.

Part (i) relies on using zw2=(zw)(zw)|z - w|^2 = (z - w)(z - w)^*, (zw)=(zw)(z - w)^* = (z^* - w^*), zw=zw|zw| = |z| |w|, and substituting wz+zw=(E2zw)w z^* + z w^* = (E - 2|zw|). Having obtained the desired equation, the reality of E is apparent from the reality of the other terms and its non-negativity is obtained from the opening result of the question. Part (ii) relies on the same principles as part (i).

The inequality can be most easily obtained by squaring it, and substituting for both numerator and denominator on the left hand side using parts (i) and (ii), and algebraic rearrangement leads to E(1z2)(1w2)0E(1 - |z|^2)(1 - |w|^2) \ge 0 which is certainly true. The argument is fully reversible as z>1|z| > 1, and w>1|w| > 1, zw>1|zw^*| > 1, and so 1zw01 - zw^* \ne 0 so the division is permissible, and the square rooting of the inequality causes no problem as the quantities are positive. The working follows identically if z<1|z| < 1, and w<1|w| < 1.

Model Solution

Triangle inequality zwz+w|z - w| \leqslant |z| + |w|:

In the Argand diagram, let OO be the origin, ZZ the point representing zz, and WW the point representing ww. Then z|z| is the distance OZOZ, w|w| is the distance OWOW, and zw|z - w| is the distance ZWZW. By the triangle inequality applied to triangle OZWOZW:

zwz+w|z - w| \leqslant |z| + |w|

with equality when OO, ZZ, WW are collinear with ZZ and WW on opposite sides of OO. \blacksquare

Part (i)

We expand zw2|z - w|^2 using the property u2=uu|u|^2 = uu^*:

zw2=(zw)(zw)=(zw)(zw)|z - w|^2 = (z - w)(z - w)^* = (z - w)(z^* - w^*)

=zzzwwz+ww=z2zwzw+w2= zz^* - zw^* - wz^* + ww^* = |z|^2 - zw^* - z^*w + |w|^2

Now expand (z+w)2(|z| + |w|)^2:

(z+w)2=z2+2zw+w2=z2+2zw+w2(|z| + |w|)^2 = |z|^2 + 2|z||w| + |w|^2 = |z|^2 + 2|zw| + |w|^2

since zw=zw|zw| = |z||w|. Therefore:

(z+w)2zw2=2zw+zw+zw=zw+zw+2zw=E(|z| + |w|)^2 - |z - w|^2 = 2|zw| + zw^* + z^*w = zw^* + z^*w + 2|zw| = E

which gives:

zw2=(z+w)2E|z - w|^2 = (|z| + |w|)^2 - E

Deducing EE is real and non-negative:

Since zw2|z - w|^2 and (z+w)2(|z| + |w|)^2 are both real (being squares of real moduli), their difference EE is real.

From the triangle inequality, zwz+w|z - w| \leqslant |z| + |w|, so zw2(z+w)2|z - w|^2 \leqslant (|z| + |w|)^2, hence E0E \geqslant 0. \blacksquare

Part (ii)

We expand 1zw2|1 - zw^*|^2 using the same property:

1zw2=(1zw)(1zw)=(1zw)(1zw)|1 - zw^*|^2 = (1 - zw^*)(1 - zw^*)^* = (1 - zw^*)(1 - z^*w)

=1zwzw+zwzw=1zwzw+z2w2= 1 - z^*w - zw^* + zw^*z^*w = 1 - zw^* - z^*w + |z|^2|w|^2

=1zwzw+zw2= 1 - zw^* - z^*w + |zw|^2

Now expand (1+zw)2(1 + |zw|)^2:

(1+zw)2=1+2zw+zw2(1 + |zw|)^2 = 1 + 2|zw| + |zw|^2

Therefore:

(1+zw)21zw2=2zw+zw+zw=zw+zw+2zw=E(1 + |zw|)^2 - |1 - zw^*|^2 = 2|zw| + zw^* + z^*w = zw^* + z^*w + 2|zw| = E

which gives:

1zw2=(1+zw)2E|1 - zw^*|^2 = (1 + |zw|)^2 - E

Proving the inequality for z>1|z| > 1 and w>1|w| > 1:

From parts (i) and (ii), the inequality

zw1zwz+w1+zw\frac{|z - w|}{|1 - zw^*|} \leqslant \frac{|z| + |w|}{1 + |zw|}

is equivalent (after squaring both sides, which preserves the inequality since both sides are non-negative) to:

(z+w)2E(1+zw)2E(z+w)2(1+zw)2\frac{(|z| + |w|)^2 - E}{(1 + |zw|)^2 - E} \leqslant \frac{(|z| + |w|)^2}{(1 + |zw|)^2}

Let A=(z+w)2A = (|z| + |w|)^2 and B=(1+zw)2B = (1 + |zw|)^2, both positive. We need AEBEAB\frac{A - E}{B - E} \leqslant \frac{A}{B}.

Cross-multiplying (valid since B>0B > 0 and BE=1zw2>0B - E = |1 - zw^*|^2 > 0 because zw=zw>1|zw^*| = |z||w| > 1 means zw1zw^* \neq 1):

B(AE)A(BE)B(A - E) \leqslant A(B - E)

ABBEABAEAB - BE \leqslant AB - AE

AEBEAE \leqslant BE

E(AB)0E(A - B) \leqslant 0

Since E0E \geqslant 0, we need AB0A - B \leqslant 0, i.e.\ (z+w)2(1+zw)2(|z| + |w|)^2 \leqslant (1 + |zw|)^2. This is equivalent to z+w1+zw|z| + |w| \leqslant 1 + |z||w| (both sides positive), which rearranges to:

01zw+zw=(1z)(1w)0 \leqslant 1 - |z| - |w| + |z||w| = (1 - |z|)(1 - |w|)

Since z>1|z| > 1 and w>1|w| > 1, both factors (1z)(1 - |z|) and (1w)(1 - |w|) are negative, so their product is positive. Hence AB0A - B \leqslant 0 holds, and therefore E(AB)0E(A - B) \leqslant 0, confirming the inequality.

All steps are reversible (the squaring step is valid since both sides are non-negative, and the denominator 1zw01 - zw^* \neq 0 since zw>1|zw^*| > 1). \blacksquare

Does the inequality hold if z<1|z| < 1 and w<1|w| < 1?

Yes. The entire argument above depends only on (1z)(1w)0(1 - |z|)(1 - |w|) \geqslant 0. When z<1|z| < 1 and w<1|w| < 1, both factors (1z)(1 - |z|) and (1w)(1 - |w|) are positive, so their product is positive. The denominator 1zw1 - zw^* is non-zero since zw=zw<1|zw^*| = |z||w| < 1, so zw1zw^* \neq 1. All other steps carry through identically.

Therefore the inequality also holds when both z<1|z| < 1 and w<1|w| < 1. \blacksquare

Examiner Notes

About half attempted this with marginally more success than question


Topic: 微分方程 Differential Equations  |  Difficulty: Hard  |  Marks: 20

7 (i) Let y(x)y(x) be a solution of the differential equation d2ydx2+y3=0\frac{\text{d}^2y}{\text{d}x^2} + y^3 = 0 with y=1y = 1 and dydx=0\frac{\text{d}y}{\text{d}x} = 0 at x=0x = 0, and let E(x)=(dydx)2+12y4.\text{E}(x) = \left( \frac{\text{d}y}{\text{d}x} \right)^2 + \frac{1}{2}y^4 . Show by differentiation that E is constant and deduce that y(x)1|y(x)| \leqslant 1 for all xx.

(ii) Let v(x)v(x) be a solution of the differential equation d2vdx2+xdvdx+sinhv=0\frac{\text{d}^2v}{\text{d}x^2} + x \frac{\text{d}v}{\text{d}x} + \sinh v = 0 with v=ln3v = \ln 3 and dvdx=0\frac{\text{d}v}{\text{d}x} = 0 at x=0x = 0, and let E(x)=(dvdx)2+2coshv.\text{E}(x) = \left( \frac{\text{d}v}{\text{d}x} \right)^2 + 2 \cosh v . Show that dEdx0\frac{\text{dE}}{\text{d}x} \leqslant 0 for x0x \geqslant 0 and deduce that coshv(x)53\cosh v(x) \leqslant \frac{5}{3} for x0x \geqslant 0.

(iii) Let w(x)w(x) be a solution of the differential equation d2wdx2+(5coshx4sinhx3)dwdx+(wcoshw+2sinhw)=0\frac{\text{d}^2w}{\text{d}x^2} + (5 \cosh x - 4 \sinh x - 3) \frac{\text{d}w}{\text{d}x} + (w \cosh w + 2 \sinh w) = 0 with dwdx=12\frac{\text{d}w}{\text{d}x} = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} and w=0w = 0 at x=0x = 0. Show that coshw(x)54\cosh w(x) \leqslant \frac{5}{4} for x0x \geqslant 0.

Hint
  1. As dEdx=2dydx(d2ydx2+y3)\frac{dE}{dx} = 2 \frac{dy}{dx} \left( \frac{d^2y}{dx^2} + y^3 \right) is zero for all xx, E(x)E(x) is constant, and E(x)=12E(x) = \frac{1}{2} using the initial conditions. The deduction follows from the non-negativity of (dydx)2\left( \frac{dy}{dx} \right)^2. In part (ii), it can be shown that dEdx=2x(dvdx)20\frac{dE}{dx} = -2x \left( \frac{dv}{dx} \right)^2 \le 0 for x0x \ge 0, and as initially E(x)=103E(x) = \frac{10}{3}, the deduction for coshv(x)\cosh v(x) follows in the same way as that in part (i). In part (iii), the choice of E(x)E(x) relies on 2(wcoshw+2sinhw)dw2 \int (w \cosh w + 2 \sinh w) dw so E(x)=(dwdx)2+2(wsinhw+coshw)E(x) = \left( \frac{dw}{dx} \right)^2 + 2(w \sinh w + \cosh w). Then

dEdx=2(dwdx)2(5coshx4sinhx3)=2(dwdx)2ex2(ex3)2\frac{dE}{dx} = -2 \left( \frac{dw}{dx} \right)^2 (5 \cosh x - 4 \sinh x - 3) = -2 \left( \frac{dw}{dx} \right)^2 \frac{e^{-x}}{2} (e^x - 3)^2, and initially E(x)=52E(x) = \frac{5}{2}.

The final result can be deduced as in the previous parts, with the additional consideration that wsinhw0w \sinh w \ge 0.

Model Solution

Part (i)

We differentiate E(x)=(dydx)2+12y4\text{E}(x) = \left(\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2 + \frac{1}{2}y^4 with respect to xx:

dEdx=2dydxd2ydx2+2y3dydx=2dydx(d2ydx2+y3).\frac{\mathrm{dE}}{\mathrm{d}x} = 2\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x}\cdot\frac{\mathrm{d}^2y}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + 2y^3\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x} = 2\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x}\left(\frac{\mathrm{d}^2y}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + y^3\right).

Since yy satisfies d2ydx2+y3=0\frac{\mathrm{d}^2y}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + y^3 = 0, the bracket vanishes, so dEdx=0\frac{\mathrm{dE}}{\mathrm{d}x} = 0 for all xx. Therefore E\text{E} is constant.

Using the initial conditions y(0)=1y(0) = 1 and y(0)=0y'(0) = 0:

E(x)=E(0)=02+12(1)4=12.\text{E}(x) = \text{E}(0) = 0^2 + \frac{1}{2}(1)^4 = \frac{1}{2}.

Since (dydx)20\left(\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2 \geqslant 0, we have 12y4E=12\frac{1}{2}y^4 \leqslant \text{E} = \frac{1}{2}, giving y41y^4 \leqslant 1, hence y(x)1|y(x)| \leqslant 1 for all xx.

Part (ii)

We differentiate E(x)=(dvdx)2+2coshv\text{E}(x) = \left(\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2 + 2\cosh v:

dEdx=2dvdxd2vdx2+2sinhvdvdx=2dvdx(d2vdx2+sinhv).\frac{\mathrm{dE}}{\mathrm{d}x} = 2\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}\cdot\frac{\mathrm{d}^2v}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + 2\sinh v\cdot\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x} = 2\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}\left(\frac{\mathrm{d}^2v}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + \sinh v\right).

From the ODE, d2vdx2=xdvdxsinhv\frac{\mathrm{d}^2v}{\mathrm{d}x^2} = -x\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x} - \sinh v, so d2vdx2+sinhv=xdvdx\frac{\mathrm{d}^2v}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + \sinh v = -x\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}.

Substituting:

dEdx=2dvdx(xdvdx)=2x(dvdx)2.\frac{\mathrm{dE}}{\mathrm{d}x} = 2\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}\left(-x\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}\right) = -2x\left(\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2.

For x0x \geqslant 0, since (dvdx)20\left(\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2 \geqslant 0, we have dEdx0\frac{\mathrm{dE}}{\mathrm{d}x} \leqslant 0.

Using the initial conditions v(0)=ln3v(0) = \ln 3 and v(0)=0v'(0) = 0, and the identity cosh(ln3)=3+132=53\cosh(\ln 3) = \frac{3 + \frac{1}{3}}{2} = \frac{5}{3}:

E(0)=0+253=103.\text{E}(0) = 0 + 2 \cdot \frac{5}{3} = \frac{10}{3}.

Since E\text{E} is non-increasing for x0x \geqslant 0, we have E(x)103\text{E}(x) \leqslant \frac{10}{3} for all x0x \geqslant 0. Therefore 2coshv(dvdx)2+2coshv=E(x)1032\cosh v \leqslant \left(\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2 + 2\cosh v = \text{E}(x) \leqslant \frac{10}{3}, giving coshv(x)53\cosh v(x) \leqslant \frac{5}{3} for x0x \geqslant 0.

Part (iii)

We need to find an energy function. The last term in the ODE, wcoshw+2sinhww\cosh w + 2\sinh w, is the derivative of wsinhw+coshww\sinh w + \cosh w with respect to ww, since

ddw(wsinhw+coshw)=sinhw+wcoshw+sinhw=wcoshw+2sinhw.\frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}w}(w\sinh w + \cosh w) = \sinh w + w\cosh w + \sinh w = w\cosh w + 2\sinh w.

We choose E(x)=(dwdx)2+2(wsinhw+coshw)\text{E}(x) = \left(\frac{\mathrm{d}w}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2 + 2(w\sinh w + \cosh w).

Differentiating:

dEdx=2dwdxd2wdx2+2dwdx(wcoshw+2sinhw)=2dwdx(d2wdx2+wcoshw+2sinhw).\frac{\mathrm{dE}}{\mathrm{d}x} = 2\frac{\mathrm{d}w}{\mathrm{d}x}\cdot\frac{\mathrm{d}^2w}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + 2\frac{\mathrm{d}w}{\mathrm{d}x}(w\cosh w + 2\sinh w) = 2\frac{\mathrm{d}w}{\mathrm{d}x}\left(\frac{\mathrm{d}^2w}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + w\cosh w + 2\sinh w\right).

From the ODE, d2wdx2+wcoshw+2sinhw=(5coshx4sinhx3)dwdx\frac{\mathrm{d}^2w}{\mathrm{d}x^2} + w\cosh w + 2\sinh w = -(5\cosh x - 4\sinh x - 3)\frac{\mathrm{d}w}{\mathrm{d}x}, so

dEdx=2(dwdx)2(5coshx4sinhx3).\frac{\mathrm{dE}}{\mathrm{d}x} = -2\left(\frac{\mathrm{d}w}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2(5\cosh x - 4\sinh x - 3).

We simplify the coefficient:

5coshx4sinhx3=5(ex+ex)24(exex)23=ex+9ex62=ex(e2x6ex+9)2=ex(ex3)22.5\cosh x - 4\sinh x - 3 = \frac{5(e^x + e^{-x})}{2} - \frac{4(e^x - e^{-x})}{2} - 3 = \frac{e^x + 9e^{-x} - 6}{2} = \frac{e^{-x}(e^{2x} - 6e^x + 9)}{2} = \frac{e^{-x}(e^x - 3)^2}{2}.

Since ex>0e^{-x} > 0 and (ex3)20(e^x - 3)^2 \geqslant 0, the coefficient is non-negative. With (dwdx)20\left(\frac{\mathrm{d}w}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^2 \geqslant 0, we get dEdx0\frac{\mathrm{dE}}{\mathrm{d}x} \leqslant 0 for all xx, so E\text{E} is non-increasing.

Using the initial conditions w(0)=0w(0) = 0 and w(0)=12w'(0) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}:

E(0)=12+2(0sinh0+cosh0)=12+2=52.\text{E}(0) = \frac{1}{2} + 2(0 \cdot \sinh 0 + \cosh 0) = \frac{1}{2} + 2 = \frac{5}{2}.

Since E\text{E} is non-increasing, E(x)52\text{E}(x) \leqslant \frac{5}{2} for x0x \geqslant 0.

Now wsinhw0w\sinh w \geqslant 0 for all real ww (since ww and sinhw\sinh w have the same sign), so 2coshw2(wsinhw+coshw)E(x)522\cosh w \leqslant 2(w\sinh w + \cosh w) \leqslant \text{E}(x) \leqslant \frac{5}{2}, giving coshw(x)54\cosh w(x) \leqslant \frac{5}{4} for x0x \geqslant 0.

Examiner Notes
  1. Common errors were false attempts for the volume at the beginning using hemisphere and cones, and in the last part approximating xx small rather than x12Rx - \frac{1}{2}R small. Many candidates were successful as far as the equilibrium but couldn’t deal with the small oscillations successfully.

Topic: 复数与几何 Complex Numbers and Geometry  |  Difficulty: Hard  |  Marks: 20

8 Evaluate r=0n1e2i(α+rπ/n)\sum_{r=0}^{n-1} \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}(\alpha+r\pi/n)} where α\alpha is a fixed angle and n2n \geqslant 2.

The fixed point OO is a distance dd from a fixed line DD. For any point PP, let ss be the distance from PP to DD and let rr be the distance from PP to OO. Write down an expression for ss in terms of dd, rr and the angle θ\theta, where θ\theta is as shown in the diagram below.

The curve EE shown in the diagram is such that, for any point PP on EE, the relation r=ksr = ks holds, where kk is a fixed number with 0<k<10 < k < 1.

Each of the nn lines L1,,LnL_1, \dots, L_n passes through OO and the angle between adjacent lines is πn\frac{\pi}{n}. The line LjL_j (j=1,,nj = 1, \dots, n) intersects EE in two points forming a chord of length ljl_j. Show that, for n2n \geqslant 2,

j=1n1lj=(2k2)n4kd.\sum_{j=1}^{n} \frac{1}{l_j} = \frac{(2 - k^2)n}{4kd} .

Hint
  1. The sum is evaluated by recognising that it is a geometric progression with common ratio e2iπ/ne^{2i\pi/n} which may be summed using the standard formula and as 1e2iπ/n01 - e^{2i\pi/n} \ne 0, the denominator

is non-zero so the sum is zero. By simple trigonometry, s=drcosθs = d - r \cos \theta. As r=ksr = ks, r=kd1+kcosθr = \frac{kd}{1+k \cos \theta}. Thus lj=kd1+kcosθ+kd1+kcos(θ+π)l_j = \frac{kd}{1+k \cos \theta} + \frac{kd}{1+k \cos(\theta+\pi)} where θ=α+(j1)π/n\theta = \alpha + (j - 1) \pi/n. Simplifying, lj=2kd1k2cos2θl_j = \frac{2kd}{1-k^2 \cos^2 \theta}. The summation of the reciprocals of this expression is simply found using a double angle formula and then by expressing the trigonometric terms as the real part of the sum at the start of the question.

Model Solution

Evaluating the sum

r=0n1e2i(α+rπ/n)=e2iαr=0n1(e2iπ/n)r.\sum_{r=0}^{n-1} \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}(\alpha+r\pi/n)} = \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\alpha} \sum_{r=0}^{n-1} \left(\mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\pi/n}\right)^r.

This is a geometric series with common ratio ω=e2iπ/n\omega = \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\pi/n}. Since n2n \geqslant 2, ω1\omega \neq 1 (as 2π/n2\pi/n is not a multiple of 2π2\pi), so the sum equals

e2iα1ωn1ω=e2iα1e2iπ1e2iπ/n=e2iα111e2iπ/n=0.\mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\alpha} \cdot \frac{1 - \omega^n}{1 - \omega} = \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\alpha} \cdot \frac{1 - \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\pi}}{1 - \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\pi/n}} = \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\alpha} \cdot \frac{1 - 1}{1 - \mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}\pi/n}} = 0.

Expression for ss

From the geometry, the distance from PP to the line DD is

s=drcosθ.s = d - r\cos\theta.

Finding the chord lengths

On the curve EE, we have r=ksr = ks. Substituting s=drcosθs = d - r\cos\theta:

r=k(drcosθ)=kdkrcosθ,r = k(d - r\cos\theta) = kd - kr\cos\theta,

so r(1+kcosθ)=kdr(1 + k\cos\theta) = kd, giving r=kd1+kcosθr = \frac{kd}{1 + k\cos\theta}.

The line LjL_j passes through OO at angle θj=α+(j1)π/n\theta_j = \alpha + (j-1)\pi/n to the horizontal. It meets EE at two points: one at angle θj\theta_j and the other at angle θj+π\theta_j + \pi. The distances from OO are

r1=kd1+kcosθjandr2=kd1+kcos(θj+π)=kd1kcosθj.r_1 = \frac{kd}{1 + k\cos\theta_j} \qquad \text{and} \qquad r_2 = \frac{kd}{1 + k\cos(\theta_j + \pi)} = \frac{kd}{1 - k\cos\theta_j}.

The chord length is

lj=r1+r2=kd(11+kcosθj+11kcosθj)=kd(1kcosθj)+(1+kcosθj)(1+kcosθj)(1kcosθj)=2kd1k2cos2θj.l_j = r_1 + r_2 = kd\left(\frac{1}{1 + k\cos\theta_j} + \frac{1}{1 - k\cos\theta_j}\right) = kd \cdot \frac{(1 - k\cos\theta_j) + (1 + k\cos\theta_j)}{(1 + k\cos\theta_j)(1 - k\cos\theta_j)} = \frac{2kd}{1 - k^2\cos^2\theta_j}.

Computing the sum of reciprocals

1lj=1k2cos2θj2kd.\frac{1}{l_j} = \frac{1 - k^2\cos^2\theta_j}{2kd}.

Therefore

j=1n1lj=12kdj=1n(1k2cos2θj)=12kd(nk2j=1ncos2θj).\sum_{j=1}^{n} \frac{1}{l_j} = \frac{1}{2kd} \sum_{j=1}^{n} (1 - k^2\cos^2\theta_j) = \frac{1}{2kd}\left(n - k^2\sum_{j=1}^{n}\cos^2\theta_j\right).

Using the double angle formula cos2θ=12(1+cos2θ)\cos^2\theta = \frac{1}{2}(1 + \cos 2\theta):

j=1ncos2θj=n2+12j=1ncos2θj.\sum_{j=1}^{n}\cos^2\theta_j = \frac{n}{2} + \frac{1}{2}\sum_{j=1}^{n}\cos 2\theta_j.

Now j=1ncos2θj=j=1ncos(2α+2(j1)π/n)\sum_{j=1}^{n}\cos 2\theta_j = \sum_{j=1}^{n}\cos(2\alpha + 2(j-1)\pi/n) is the real part of j=1nei(2α+2(j1)π/n)\sum_{j=1}^{n}\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}(2\alpha + 2(j-1)\pi/n)}.

Setting r=j1r = j - 1, this is the real part of r=0n1e2i(α+rπ/n)\sum_{r=0}^{n-1}\mathrm{e}^{2\mathrm{i}(\alpha + r\pi/n)}, which we showed equals 00 in the first part. Therefore j=1ncos2θj=0\sum_{j=1}^{n}\cos 2\theta_j = 0, and

j=1ncos2θj=n2.\sum_{j=1}^{n}\cos^2\theta_j = \frac{n}{2}.

Substituting back:

j=1n1lj=12kd(nk2n2)=n(2k2)4kd.\sum_{j=1}^{n} \frac{1}{l_j} = \frac{1}{2kd}\left(n - k^2 \cdot \frac{n}{2}\right) = \frac{n(2 - k^2)}{4kd}.

Examiner Notes
  1. The immediate problem was many made no mention of probabilities in order to calculate expectations. Throughout, there was very poor justification, which included treating the random variables as though they were independent and compensating errors which led to given results. Most progressed no further than part (a) of (ii) at best and many had E(Xi)=abn2E(X_i) = \frac{ab}{n^2}.