Trigonometric series

From testwiki
Revision as of 08:45, 29 December 2024 by imported>Roffaduft (removed insufficient statement, replaced it with inline citations instead)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use American English Template:Trigonometry

In mathematics, trigonometric series are a special class of orthogonal series of the formTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

A0+n=1Ancos(nx)+Bnsin(nx),

where x is the variable and {An} and {Bn} are coefficients. It is an infinite version of a trigonometric polynomial.

A trigonometric series is called the Fourier series of the integrable function f if the coefficients have the form:

An=1π02πf(x)cos(nx)dx
Bn=1π02πf(x)sin(nx)dx

Examples

The Fourier series for the identity function suffers from the Gibbs phenomenon near the ends of the periodic interval.

Every Fourier series gives an example of a trigonometric series. Let the function f(x)=x on [π,π] be extended periodically (see sawtooth wave). Then its Fourier coefficients are:

An=1πππxcos(nx)dx=0,n0.Bn=1πππxsin(nx)dx=xnπcos(nx)+1n2πsin(nx)|x=ππ=2(1)n+1n,n1.

Which gives an example of a trigonometric series:

2n=1(1)n+1nsin(nx)=2sin(x)22sin(2x)+23sin(3x)24sin(4x)+
The trigonometric series Template:Math Template:Math Template:Math is not a Fourier series.

However, the converse is false. For example,

n=2sin(nx)logn=sin(2x)log2+sin(3x)log3+sin(4x)log4+

is a trigonometric series which converges for all x but is not a Fourier series.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Uniqueness of trigonometric series

The uniqueness and the zeros of trigonometric series was an active area of research in 19th century Europe. First, Georg Cantor proved that if a trigonometric series is convergent to a function f on the interval [0,2π], which is identically zero, or more generally, is nonzero on at most finitely many points, then the coefficients of the series are all zero.[1]

Later Cantor proved that even if the set S on which f is nonzero is infinite, but the derived set S' of S is finite, then the coefficients are all zero. In fact, he proved a more general result. Let S0 = S and let Sk+1 be the derived set of Sk. If there is a finite number n for which Sn is finite, then all the coefficients are zero. Later, Lebesgue proved that if there is a countably infinite ordinal α such that Sα is finite, then the coefficients of the series are all zero. Cantor's work on the uniqueness problem famously led him to invent transfinite ordinal numbers, which appeared as the subscripts α in Sα .[2]

See also

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

Template:Series (mathematics)