Could be this : cos n </msup> &#x2061;<!-- ⁡ --> ( i ) + si

Chant6j

Chant6j

Answered question

2022-07-01

Could be this : cos n ( i ) + sin n ( i ) integer for n>2?

Answer & Explanation

pampatsha

pampatsha

Beginner2022-07-02Added 15 answers

Clearly n should be even, because sin ( i ) = sin i is purely imaginary.
If n is a multiple of 4, we have
sin ( i ) = sin i
If this is an integer N, then we get
( 1 + e 2 ) n + ( 1 e 2 ) n = 2 n e n N
which is impossible, because we'd obtain a polynomial of degree 2n with integer coefficients having e as root.
So the only possibility is to have n 2 ( mod 4 ), when the equality would be
( 1 + e 2 ) n 2 n e n ( 1 e 2 ) n 2 n e n = N
With the binomial theorem,
k = 0 n ( n k ) e 2 k k = 0 n ( n k ) ( 1 ) k e 2 k = 2 n N e n
so
2 0 k n k  odd ( n k ) e 2 k = 2 n N e n
If n>2, this would again give a polynomial with integer coefficients having e as root.
So the only case is indeed n=2.

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