How to prove \(\displaystyle{4}{\cos{{\left({x}\right)}}}+{x}{\sin{{\left({x}\right)}}}\geq{4}-{x}^{{{2}}}\) for all real

Tiffany Maldonado

Tiffany Maldonado

Answered question

2022-04-08

How to prove 4cos(x)+xsin(x)4x2 for all real x, with equality if and only if x=0?

Answer & Explanation

Juan Goodwin

Juan Goodwin

Beginner2022-04-09Added 10 answers

Step 1
Let h(x)=4cos(x)+xsin(x)+x24; note that h(x) is even. For reference, we have
h (x)=2x+xcos(x)3sin(x)
h (x)=22cos(x)xsin(x)
h(3)(x)=sin(x)xcos(x)
h(4)(x)=xsin(x)
h(5)(x)=sin(x)+xcos(x)
h(6)(x)=2cos(x)xsin(x)
Claim: It suffices to show h(x)0 on [0, π]
We have h(x)=x(1+cos(x))+(x3sin(x))
For x>0 the first term is non-negative and for x>π the second one iss as well the unique positive real solution of x=3sin(x) is x2.28 but we take x=π for convenience). In other words, for x>π we have h(x)>0 and h(π)>0.
Claim: h(0)=0 (obvious) and h has its global minimum at zero.
This is basically a corollary to the Second Derivative Test. Note that h''''(x)0 on [π,π] as the signs of the terms agree, which implies h  has a minimum at x=0, i.e. that h (x)0 on [π,π]. Alternatively, since the sixth derivative is the first to evaluate to a nonzero number at zero and this value is positive, h has a minimum at x=0.

unduncjineei5r3

unduncjineei5r3

Beginner2022-04-10Added 19 answers

Step 1
By Taylor's theorem with the mean-value forms of the remainder,
1) f(x)=x2+4cosx+xsinx4=x6360+(3sin(ζ)ζcos(ζ))x75040
where ζ is between 0 and x, and
f(7)(x)=3sin(x)xcosx
So if |x| is small enough (e.g., |x|<11) (1) is non-negative. If |x|>11 (11 can be made smaller), we can easily prove x2+4cosx+xsinx4>0.

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