Asked by sam

give the expansion sin^8@ as a series of cos@
plz help me show working
where @ means theta

Answers

Answered by Count Iblis
sin^2(theta) = 1-cos^2(theta)

Therefore:

sin^8(theta) = [1-cos^2(theta)]^4 =

1 - 4 cos^2(theta) + 6 cos^4(theta) - 4 cos^6(theta) + cos^8(theta)
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