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can anyone help with this complex fourier series problem (in details please specially the Cn term) (as in the attached picture)here is the problem

aows61
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  • Welcome to MSE. It will be more likely that you will get an answer of you show us that you made some effort. Besides, use MathJax, please. – José Carlos Santos Jul 26 '17 at 11:23
  • I don't get your problem and where you stuck. It the integration the problem? There you already have $\cos(t/2)=\frac12(e^{(t/2)j}+e^{-(t/2)j})$ and therefore $\int \cos(t/2)e^{-jnt}~dt=\frac12\left(\int e^{((1/2)-n)tj}~dt+\int e^{-((1/2)+n)tj}~dt\right)=\frac12\left(\frac{-j}{(1/2)-n}e^{((1/2)-n)tj}+\frac{j}{(1/2)+n}e^{-((1/2)-n)tj}\right)$ – Mundron Schmidt Jul 26 '17 at 11:36
  • @Mundron Schmidt Actually, he had $\cos\frac{t}2=\frac{e^{jt/2}-e^{−jt/2}}2,$ and that may have been the problem. –  Jul 26 '17 at 12:06
  • yes, exactly the cos(t/2) making some problem to me, can you help with that ? – aows61 Jul 26 '17 at 13:03
  • here is my attempt (i hope it is clear): part 1>> https://i.imgur.com/KPqQ62W.png
    part 2>> https://i.imgur.com/gwxsMU1.jpg part 3>> https://i.imgur.com/99mNVn1.jpg part 4>> https://i.imgur.com/AHAWtKr.jpg

    and here is the original solution: https://i.imgur.com/vNPcBdw.jpg

    (how did he came with this results of Cn) where is my mistake?

    – aows61 Jul 26 '17 at 13:35
  • @ProfessorVector kindly check my above comment – aows61 Jul 26 '17 at 13:45
  • @MundronSchmidt kindly check my above comment – aows61 Jul 26 '17 at 13:46

1 Answers1

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Ok, now I see your problem. There are three mistakes in your computation.

1.

Like ProfessorVector mentioned: You have a sign mistake in your cosine identity. It is $\cos(x)=\frac12(e^{xi}+e^{-xi})$.

2.

On sheet 2 you change $\frac{2(j+2jn)}{-(1-4n^2)}$ to $\frac{2(j+2n\pi)}{-(1-4n^2)}$. How did $j$ become $\pi$? That's wrong. Further, you are not consequent in your computation. So started with $\int\ldots$ and in the middle part, you included the factor $\frac1{4\pi}$ out of the blue. The right solution of your sheet $2$ should be $$ \int_{-\pi}^\pi e^{(1/2-n)tj}~dt=\frac{2(1+2n)j}{-(1-4n^2)}(-1)^n\left(e^{\frac{\pi}2j}-e^{-\frac{\pi}2j}\right). $$ If you use the identities $e^{\frac{\pi}2j}=j$ and $e^{-\frac{\pi}2j}=-j$ you get $$ \frac{2(1+2n)j}{-(1-4n^2)}(-1)^n\left(e^{\frac{\pi}2j}-e^{-\frac{\pi}2j}\right)=\frac{2(1+2n)j}{-(1-4n^2)}(-1)^n2j=(-1)^n\frac{4(1+2n)}{1-4n^2}. $$ It is more useful to get $e^{\frac{\pi}2j}-e^{-\frac{\pi}2j}=2j$ insteat of $2\sinh\left(\frac{\pi}2j\right)$.

3.

On sheet 3, your computation seems right, but when you included the result on sheet 4, you changed again $j$ to $\pi$. And using the identities as above you should get $$ \int_{-\pi}^\pi e^{-(1/2+n)tj}~dt=(-1)^n\frac{4(1-2n)}{1-4n^2}. $$ Finally you can combine the results and you get \begin{align} C_n&=\frac1{4\pi}\left(\int_{-\pi}^\pi e^{(1/2-n)tj}+\int_{-\pi}^\pi e^{-(1/2+n)tj}\right)\\ &=\frac1{4\pi}\left((-1)^n\frac{4(1+2n)}{1-4n^2}+(-1)^n\frac{4(1-2n)}{1-4n^2}\right)\\ &=\frac{(-1)^n}{\pi}\left(\frac{1+2n}{1-4n^2}+\frac{1-2n}{1-4n^2}\right)\\ &=\frac{(-1)^n\cdot 2}{\pi(1-4n^2)} \end{align}

  • can't thank you enough for you time Mr. @Mundron Schmidt mission accomplished.

    I have a question: can we get the same results if we use the sinh identity instead of the (j) and (-j) that you mentioned above ??

    – aows61 Jul 26 '17 at 21:31
  • and thanks indeed for your notice Mr. @ProfessorVector – aows61 Jul 26 '17 at 21:31
  • kindly can you check the previous comment – aows61 Jul 26 '17 at 22:17
  • is it possible to get the same solution using the (Sinh) identity instead of the (j) identity that you mentioned before ? – aows61 Jul 27 '17 at 06:29
  • Hello Dear Mr. @Mundron Schmidt i didn't find the (j) identity that you mentioned before anywhere, can you may be give more details about it ? – aows61 Jul 27 '17 at 06:35
  • You might know the Euler identity $e^{tj}=\cos(t)+\sin(t)j$. Include $t=\pm\frac{\pi}2$ and compute $\cos\left(\pm\frac{\pi}2\right)=0$ while $\sin\left(\pm\frac{\pi}2\right)=\pm1$. – Mundron Schmidt Jul 27 '17 at 06:43
  • very helpful, thanks indeed for your time. @Mundron Schmidt

    is it possible to get the same results if we use the (Sinh) identity ?

    – aows61 Jul 27 '17 at 06:49
  • I think you can check yourself what will happen. Hint: Where was it useful to have $j$ instead of $\sinh$? – Mundron Schmidt Jul 27 '17 at 06:54
  • I will check, thanks indeed @MundronSchmidt – aows61 Jul 27 '17 at 07:01
  • Hello dear Mr. @Mundron Schmidt am trying to solve this Fourier Trans. problem, here is my attempt, part 1>> https://i.imgur.com/DT2tJ0y.jpg part 2>> https://i.imgur.com/jopEoQd.jpg part 3>> https://i.imgur.com/cKXoekT.jpg

    and here is the original solution >> https://i.imgur.com/eJJ5FLF.png

    How did he come up with this result and where is my mistake?

    – aows61 Jul 27 '17 at 14:53
  • Hello dear mr. @MundronSchmidt , can you help me with my last comment... – aows61 Jul 27 '17 at 15:57
  • Hello dear Mr. @Mundron Schmidt am trying to solve this Fourier Trans. problem, here is my attempt, part 1>> i.imgur.com/DT2tJ0y.jpg part 2>> i.imgur.com/jopEoQd.jpg part 3>> i.imgur.com/cKXoekT.jpg and here is the original solution >> i.imgur.com/eJJ5FLF.png How did he come up with this result and where is my mistake? can you spot the mistakes ? – aows61 Jul 28 '17 at 06:43
  • hello mr can you spot my mistake on the last comment?? – aows61 Jul 28 '17 at 12:31
  • Please make a new question for a new problem. – Mundron Schmidt Jul 30 '17 at 17:34
  • Ok, Mr. @Mundron Schmidt , i actually made the new question in a comment because the website didn't let me post a new one which i needed urgently, that's why i made it in a comment. – aows61 Jul 31 '17 at 08:42