2004 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 21

Problem

If $\sum_{n = 0}^{\infty}{\cos^{2n}}\theta = 5$, what is the value of $\cos{2\theta}$?

$\text {(A)} \frac15 \qquad \text {(B)} \frac25 \qquad \text {(C)} \frac {\sqrt5}{5}\qquad \text {(D)} \frac35 \qquad \text {(E)}\frac45$

Solutions

Solution 1

This is an infinite geometric series, which sums to $\frac{\cos^0 \theta}{1 - \cos^2 \theta} = 5 \Longrightarrow 1 = 5 - 5\cos^2 \theta \Longrightarrow \cos^2 \theta = \frac{4}{5}$. Using the formula $\cos 2\theta = 2\cos^2 \theta - 1 = 2\left(\frac 45\right) - 1 = \frac 35 \Rightarrow \mathrm{(D)}$.

Solution 1a

We can more directly solve this with superficially less work. Again, applying the formula for an infinite geometric series,

\[\sum_{i=0}^{\infty}\cos^{2i}\theta=\dfrac1{1-\cos^2\theta}=\dfrac1{\sin^2\theta}=5.\]

Thus, $\sin^2\theta=\dfrac15$, so $\cos(2\theta)=1-2\sin^2\theta=1-\dfrac25=\dfrac35.$ QED.

~Technodoggo

Solution 2

\[\sum_{n = 0}^{\infty}{\cos^{2n}}\theta = \cos^{0}\theta + \cos^{2}\theta + \cos^{4}\theta + ... = 5\]

Multiply both sides by $\cos^{2}\theta$ to get:

\[\cos^{2}\theta + \cos^{4}\theta + \cos^{6}\theta + ... = 5*\cos^{2}\theta\]

Subtracting the two equations, we get:

\[\cos^{0}\theta=5-5*\cos^{2}\theta\]

After simplification, we get $cos^{2}\theta=\frac{4}{5}$. Using the formula $\cos 2\theta = 2\cos^2 \theta - 1 = 2\left(\frac 45\right) - 1 = \frac 35 \Rightarrow \mathrm{(D)}$.

See also

2004 AMC 12A (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 20
Followed by
Problem 22
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All AMC 12 Problems and Solutions

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