How do you find the maclaurin series expansion of #cos(x^3)#?

1 Answer
Sep 21, 2015

By far the best way is to use the well-known Maclaurin series for #cos(x)# and replace all the #x's# with #x^3#'s.

Explanation:

We know that #cos(x)=1-x^2/(2!)+x^4/(4!)-x^6/(6!)+cdots# for all #x#. Therefore, #cos(x^3)=1-x^6/(2!)+x^12/(4!)-x^18/(6!)+cdots# for all #x#.

It's very unpleasant, but if you let #f(x)=cos(x^3)#, you could also try using:

#f(0)+f'(0)x+(f''(0))/(2!)x^2+(f'''(0))/(3!)+(f''''(0))/(4!)+cdots#