my second question from
[An inequality for the product $\prod_{k=2}^{n}\cos\frac{\pi }{2^{k}}$
Let $n\geq 2\quad a_{n}=\prod\limits_{k=2}^{n}\cos\left(\dfrac{\pi }{2^{k}}\right)$ and $b_{n}=a_{n}\cos\left(\dfrac{\pi }{2^{n}}\right)$
Show that $a_{n}$ is decreasing and bounded
note that $ \forall x\in [0,\dfrac{\pi}{2}],\quad \cos(x) \geq 0$ since $\pi/2^n \in [0,\dfrac{\pi}{2}]$ then $cos(\dfrac{\pi}{2})\geq 0$ then $a_n\geq 0 $
let $a_n=a_{nā1}\cos(\dfrac{\pi}{2^n})\quad \forall n\geq 3$
then $a_{n+1}āa_n=a_n(\cos(\dfrac{\pi}{2^{n+1}})-1)$ which is negative since $(\cos(\dfrac{\pi}{2^{n+1}})-1)$ its.
but for bounded :
we've already that $a_n\geq 0,\quad \forall n \geq 2$
note that $|(cos(\pi/2^k)|\leq 1\quad \forall k\geq 2$ then $\prod_{k=3}^{n}|(cos(\pi/2^k)|\leq 1 $ thus $0\leq a_n \leq 1$
am i right ?
any help would be appreciated