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telegrafyx

telegrafyx

Answered question

2022-06-26

Let
f ( x ) = n 0 a n x n = P ( x ) ( 1 x ) d
be a rational function.
(a) Prove: There is a polynomial P 2 ( x ) so
n 0 a 2 n x n = P 2 ( x ) ( 1 x ) d
(b) Let r 1 N . Show that an polynomial P r exists so that
n 0 a r n x n = P r ( x ) ( 1 x ) d
Hint: Use the rth roots of unity which are defined by exp ( 2 π i k r ) , 0 k r 1
(a) I don't know what this d is about (and no one else did). Might be an absolute term.
As f ( x ) is a rational function, it can be defined as a fraction of two polynomials P ( x ) Q ( x ) . But that is unfortunately all I know about this.
Could you please help me going on?
(b) I don't know how the rth roots of unity (and therefore numbers x for which applies: x r = 1) can help me solving this? I don't find any approach.
Could you please help me a bit?
Thanks in advance!

Answer & Explanation

candelo6a

candelo6a

Beginner2022-06-27Added 24 answers

Here's what you need to know about roots of unity. Let ζ = e 2 π i / r . Then the rth roots of unity are the numbers 1 , ζ , ζ 2 , , ζ r 1 . Let m be some integer, and raise all these numbers to the power m, and add them: 1 + ζ m + ζ 2 m + + ζ ( r 1 ) m . That's the sum of a geometric progression. If m is a multiple of r then each term in the sum is 1 so the sum is r. If m is not a multiple of r then you should check that the formula for the sum of a geometric progression tells you that the sum is zero.
OK?
glycleWogry

glycleWogry

Beginner2022-06-28Added 8 answers

For (a), try comparing f ( x ) and f ( x ). This should give you some idea how to use the hint in given in (b).

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