You can stop right there, or you can try finding the exact value of
.
Recall DeMoivre's theorem:
This means when
, the imaginary part of the expansion of the left side will give you an expanded form of
in terms of powers of
. You have
where the last equality comes from the fact that
. So
Now, setting
, you get
Clearly,
, so you're left with the quartic equation
Applying the quadratic formula gives a solution of
Since
, we should expect
to be smaller, which means we take the positive root because
, and adding a positive number would make this larger. So,
which means
but we also expect this number to be positive, so we ignore the negative root and end up with
So the limit is
Now, there's no reason to expect this to have a simpler form, so we can stop here. (Perhaps this answer is overkill, but if you didn't know this stuff, it doesn't hurt to learn it.)