
Originally Posted by
johan
How do I prove that
2^n > n^3 for n>10 or n=10??? I am suposed to use the induktion principle(this is a straight translation from swedish so might not be the correct english term).
I have done it in steps.
Step 1. 2^10 > 10^3. The difference is valid for n=10.
Step 2. Assume that the difference is true for n=p where p=10 or p>10
2^p > p^3 <=> 2^p - p^3 > 0
Step 3
2^(p+1) - (p+1)^3 = 2*2^p - (p^3 + p^2 + 3p + 1)=
= 2*2^p - p^3 - p^2 - 3p -1 > 0
How do I continue from there?? Or have I made a error in step 3?
Should I replace 2*2^p with 2*p^3?? damn I hate this

ok ok.........i think you are totally making this more complicated then it really is.......first off......does ^ mean multiplication?!?!?........you need to explain all the terms.........
no clue what the induktion principle is................please explain
what Math class are you taking?............
"where p=10 or p>10"....quoting you.........now if P is 10..........then how is P greater then 10......???......10 equals 10.......
im just trying to help you............if i have all the correct terms and know what you are trying to solve...........this problem will be a breeze for me........
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