Advanced High-School Mathematics

(Tina Meador) #1

SECTION 2.1 Elementary Number Theory 101


However, given thatu 0 = 0, u 1 = 1, we get

0 = A
1 = Acos
2 π
3

+Bsin
2 π
3

=−

A

2

+


3 B

2

ThereforeA= 0 andB=

√^2

3

, forcing the solution to be

un =

2


3

sin

2 πn
3

, n= 0, 1 , 2 ,....

Higher-degreecharacteristic polynomials.
We won’t treat this case systematically, except to say that upon
factoring the polynomial into irreducible linear and quadratic fac-
tors, then one can proceed as indicated above (see Exercise 14).
Additional complications result with higher-order repeated factors
which we don’t treat here.

Higher-order differences


In Section 2.1.9 we treated only the so-called homogeneous linear
difference equations. An inhomogeneous linear difference equation
has the general form


C(u) =v,

whereC(x) is a monic polynomial,v= (vn)n≥ 0 is a given sequence and
whereu= (un)n≥ 0 is the unknown sequence.


We have already encountered such an example above, in the example
on page 312 giving an arithmetic sequence:


un+1−un=d, n= 0, 1 , 2 ,....

We won’t treat inhomogeneous linear difference equations in any
detail except for a very special case, namely those having constant

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