Express cos9x+cos5x as a product.

Can you just multiply the 9 and 5 to get: cos45x
? is that a product?

oohhhh noooo!

we have a formula
cosA + cosB = 2cos(A+B)/2 * cos(A-B)/2

so cos 9x + cos 5x = 2cos(9x+5x)/2 cos(9x-5x)/2
= 2(cos 7x)(cos 2x)

No, simply multiplying the exponents of the trigonometric functions does not result in a valid product. However, there is a trigonometric identity called the double angle formula that can be applied here. The double angle formula for cosine states:

cos(2θ) = 2cos²(θ) - 1

Using this formula, we can write cos9x as:

cos9x = cos(2 * 4.5x)
= 2cos²(4.5x) - 1

Similarly, cos5x can be written as:

cos5x = cos(2 * 2.5x)
= 2cos²(2.5x) - 1

Now we can rewrite the expression cos9x + cos5x by substituting the above expressions:

cos9x + cos5x = (2cos²(4.5x) - 1) + (2cos²(2.5x) - 1)

Next, we can expand the equation and simplify:

cos9x + cos5x = 2cos²(4.5x) + 2cos²(2.5x) - 2

Therefore, the expression cos9x + cos5x can be expressed as a product of the cosine functions squared minus 2.