Re: Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- From: Phil Carmody <thefatphil_demunged@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 24 May 2007 16:25:22 +0300
quasi <quasi@xxxxxxxx> writes:
Conjecture 1:
Let r,s,t be integers such that gcd(rs,t)=1, and let a=sin(r),
b=sin(s), c=sin(t). Then c _cannot_ be expressed as a polynomial in
a,b.
What if t is 0?
Phil
--
"Home taping is killing big business profits. We left this side blank
so you can help." -- Dead Kennedys, written upon the B-side of tapes of
/In God We Trust, Inc./.
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- From: gtsavdar
- Re: Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- References:
- Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- From: gtsavdar
- Re: Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- From: quasi
- Re: Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- From: quasi
- Re: Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- From: quasi
- Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- Prev by Date: Re: Fermat's Last theorem short proof
- Next by Date: Re: Bassam's hidden meaning
- Previous by thread: Re: Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- Next by thread: Re: Simple, but a bit hard, Trigonometry problem.
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|