Series expansion

From testwiki
Revision as of 15:45, 29 December 2024 by imported>Cewbot (Fixing broken anchor: Remove 2 notifications (When checking links to Fourier series))
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:More citations neededTemplate:Unreliable sources

Approximation of cosine by a Taylor series
An animation showing the cosine function being approximated by successive truncations of its Maclaurin series.

In mathematics, a series expansion is a technique that expresses a function as an infinite sum, or series, of simpler functions. It is a method for calculating a function that cannot be expressed by just elementary operators (addition, subtraction, multiplication and division).[1]

The resulting so-called series often can be limited to a finite number of terms, thus yielding an approximation of the function. The fewer terms of the sequence are used, the simpler this approximation will be. Often, the resulting inaccuracy (i.e., the partial sum of the omitted terms) can be described by an equation involving Big O notation (see also asymptotic expansion). The series expansion on an open interval will also be an approximation for non-analytic functions.[2]Template:Verify source

Types of series expansions

There are several kinds of series expansions, listed below.

Taylor series

A Taylor series is a power series based on a function's derivatives at a single point.[3] More specifically, if a function f:U is infinitely differentiable around a point x0, then the Taylor series of f around this point is given by

n=0f(n)(x0)n!(xx0)n

under the convention 00:=1.[3][4] The Maclaurin series of f is its Taylor series about x0=0.[5][4]

Laurent series

A Laurent series is a generalization of the Taylor series, allowing terms with negative exponents; it takes the form k=ck(za)k and converges in an annulus.[6] In particular, a Laurent series can be used to examine the behavior of a complex function near a singularity by considering the series expansion on an annulus centered at the singularity.

Dirichlet series

spiral representing partial sums of the Dirichlet series defining the Riemann zeta function
Convergence and divergence of partial sums of the Dirichlet series defining the Riemann zeta function. Here, the yellow line represents the first fifty successive partial sums n=1kns, the magenta dotted line represents ns+1s+1+ζ(s), and the green dot represents ζ(s) as s is varied from -0.5 to 1.5.

A general Dirichlet series is a series of the form n=1aneλns. One important special case of this is the ordinary Dirichlet series n=1anns.[7] Used in number theory.Template:Citation needed

Fourier series

A Fourier series is an expansion of periodic functions as a sum of many sine and cosine functions.[8] More specifically, the Fourier series of a function f(x) of period 2L is given by the expressiona0+n=1[ancos(nπxL)+bnsin(nπxL)]where the coefficients are given by the formulae[8][9]an:=1LLLf(x)cos(nπxL)dx,bn:=1LLLf(x)sin(nπxL)dx.

Other series

The relative error in a truncated Stirling series vs. Template:Mvar, for 0 to 5 terms. The kinks in the curves represent points where the truncated series coincides with Γ(n+1).

Examples

The following is the Taylor series of ex:ex=n=0xnn!=1+x+x22+x36...[11][12]

The Dirichlet series of the Riemann zeta function isζ(s):=n=11ns=11s+12s+[7]

References