During my work, I encounter the function like $\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}$. I'm puzzled and knew nothing about this function before. 

Given integer $n>1$, my question is how to find a simple function to bound $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}|$ as tight as possible for $0 \le \omega \le \pi/2$. That is to say, we need to find a polynomial $g(n,\omega)$ such that $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}| \le g(n,\omega)$ and $g(n,\omega)$ is as close to $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}|$ as possible. To the simpleness, I think polynomials with lower order meet the requirements.

My idea is to bound $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}|$ individually. For $0 \le \omega \le \frac{\pi}{2n}$, we bound $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}|$ by Taylor expansion at $\omega = 0$. However, when $\frac{\pi}{2n} \le \omega \le \frac{\pi}{2}$, I don't know how to find a appropriate polynomial to bound $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}|$.

For $\frac{\pi}{2n} \le \omega \le \frac{\pi}{2}$, the envelope of $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}|$ is $\frac{1}{n \sin \omega}$, i.e., $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}| \le \frac{1}{n \sin \omega}$. One of my ideas is to find a simple polynomial to bound $\frac{1}{n \sin \omega}$ as tight as possible. But how to find? 

I do some experiments with matlab. Let $n=40$. Figure 1 is $\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}$. Figure 2 is $|\frac{\sin(n \omega)}{n \sin \omega}|$. In Figure 3, the red line is the Taylor expansion at $\omega=0$, the green line is $\frac{1}{n \sin \omega}$ with $\frac{\pi}{2n} \le |\omega| \le \frac{\pi}{2}$.

Thanks for any help!

![Figure 1][1]
![Figure 2][2]
![Figure 3][3]

  [1]: http://www.freeimagehosting.net/uploads/1f91dbd453.jpg
  [2]: http://www.freeimagehosting.net/uploads/ec22eb2c06.jpg
  [3]: http://www.freeimagehosting.net/uploads/78daec874d.jpg