Comment on the previous posting: Thanks for the correction. The first expansion is to be without cos function, only the argument as you indicated. However, the other derivations are correct. I forgot to erase cos in each term.
My point is this:
The modulation index m is applied to frequency Fp as well as to phase (angle) where there is not frequency. It may happen that the phase modulation is negligible with respect to frequency modulation. In that case the m terms pertaining to the phase modulation may be neglected.
I notice that there is an assumption stating "If m is small (<<1) then we approximate cos(msinWpt)~1 and we approximate sin(msinWpt)~msin(Wpt)." This would imply that
cos<2*pi*1x[1 + m - m x (1/2!)x(2*pi*Fp*t)^2 + m x (1/4!)x(2*pi*Fp*t)^4 - ....
]*t>
would become:
cos<2*pi*1x[1 - m x (1/2!)x(2*pi*Fp*t)^2 + m x (1/4!)x(2*pi*Fp*t)^4 - ....
]*t>
thus covering the frequency modulation only.
Beside the above statements, the variable t outside of rectangular bracket in the cos argument:
cos<2*pi*1x[1+m*cos(2*pi*Fp*t)]*t>
also needs a clarification since the typical Wideband Frequency Modulation (FM) has a form:
fc(t)= A x cos[wc x t + (a x kf / ws) x sin(ws x t)]=
= A x cos[wc x t + mf x sin(ws x t)]
where
mf is the modulation index.
See Reference:
B.P. Lathi "Signals, Systems and Communication," John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1965.
page 495, Equations 11.55 and 11.56.