236 4 Geometry and Trigonometry
Solution.Let 1 , 2 ,...,kbe thekth roots of unity, that is,j=cos^2 jπk +isin^2 jπk ,
j= 1 , 2 ,...,k. The sum
s 1 + 2 s+···+ks
is equal tokifkdividess, and to 0 ifkdoes not divides. We have
∑k
j= 1
( 1 +j)n=
∑n
s= 0
(
n
s
)⎛
⎝
∑k
j= 1
js
⎞
⎠=k
∑nk
j= 0
(
n
jk
)
.
Since
1 +j=2 cos
jπ
k
(
cos
jπ
k
+isin
jπ
k
)
,
it follows from the de Moivre formula that
∑k
j= 1
( 1 +j)n=
∑k
j= 1
2 ncosn
jπ
k
(
cos
nj π
k
+isin
nj π
k
)
.
Therefore,
(
n
0
)
+
(
n
k
)
+
(
n
2 k
)
+··· =
2 n
k
∑k
j= 1
cosn
jπ
k
(
cos
nj π
k
+isin
nj π
k
)
.
The left-hand side is real, so we can ignore the imaginary part and obtain the identity
from the statement.
And now a problem given at an Indian Team Selection Test for the International
Mathematical Olympiad in 2005, proposed by the first author of the book.
Example.For real numbersa, b, c, dnot all equal to zero, letf:R→R,
f(x)=a+bcos 2x+csin 5x+dcos 8x.
Suppose thatf(t)= 4 afor some real numbert. Prove that there exists a real numbers
such thatf(s) <0.
Solution.Letg(x)=be^2 ix−ice^5 ix+de^8 ix. Thenf(x)=a+Reg(x). Note that
g(x)+g
(
x+
2 π
3
)
+g
(
x+
4 π
3
)
=g(x)
(
1 +e^2 πi/^3 +e^4 πi/^3
)
= 0.
Therefore,