Is it immediately apparent that the solution to the system of equations, <mtable displaystyle="t

Timiavawsw9

Timiavawsw9

Answered question

2022-05-31

Is it immediately apparent that the solution to the system of equations,
(1) x 1 2 = x 2 + 2 x 2 2 = x 3 + 2 x 3 2 = x 4 + 2 x n 2 = x 1 + 2
can be given by the roots of unity? Specifically,
(2a) x = y k 2 + 1 y k
where the y k are,
(2b) y k = exp ( 2 π i k 2 n 1 ) , k = 0 2 n 1 1 y k = exp ( 2 π i k 2 n + 1 ) , k = 1 2 n 1
Example. Let n = 4. Then ( 1 ) is equivalent to,
(3) x = ( ( ( x 2 2 ) 2 2 ) 2 2 ) 2 2
Expanded out, ( 3 ) is a 2 4 = 16-deg polynomial and its 16 roots are given by ( 2 ) where,
y k = exp ( 2 π i k 15 ) , k = 0 7
y k = exp ( 2 π i k 17 ) , k = 1 8
Ramanujan considered the system ( 1 ) for n = 3 , 4 in the general case and also as nested radicals. For x = ( ( ( x 2 a ) 2 a ) 2 a ) 2 a, see this related post. (Interestingly, n = 5 in the general case is no longer completely solvable in radicals.)
Question:
I observed ( 2 ) empirically. How do we prove from first principles that this is indeed the solution?

Answer & Explanation

tradirasi

tradirasi

Beginner2022-06-01Added 6 answers

Let f ( x ) = x 2 2. Then
f ( 2 cos u ) = 4 cos 2 u 2 = 2 ( 2 cos 2 u 1 ) = 2 cos 2 u
so
f n ( 2 cos u ) = 2 cos 2 n u
Then f n ( x ) = x becomes
cos u = cos 2 n u
for which solutions are given by
( 2 n 1 ) u = 2 k π , k = 0 , ± 1 , ± 2 ,

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