Math Is Fun Forum

  Discussion about math, puzzles, games and fun.   Useful symbols: ÷ × ½ √ ∞ ≠ ≤ ≥ ≈ ⇒ ± ∈ Δ θ ∴ ∑ ∫ • π ƒ -¹ ² ³ °

You are not logged in.

#1 2008-11-27 14:12:12

Nils-Ake
Member
Registered: 2008-04-15
Posts: 20

Taylor polynomial

Hi. I'm doing something wrong here but I can't find out what it is.

Use Taylor's theorem to determine the degree of the Taylor polynomial for ln(1-x) required for the error in the approximation of ln(0.75) to be less than .001.

(I assume it is centered at a = 0)

Derivatives:

Taylor polynomial:

Where

------------------------------------------------------------------------


Now I evaluate the polynomial for x=0.25

At this point I plotted f^n+1 and saw that

So this should give me the answer

I get n>=3 but the book says n>=4. Where did I go wrong? sad

Offline

#2 2010-10-25 05:21:06

bobbym
bumpkin
From: Bumpkinland
Registered: 2009-04-12
Posts: 109,606

Re: Taylor polynomial

Hi Nils-Ake;

I do not know exactly where you went wrong but the book answer is right. Here is how I would compute the error.

a = 0
x = .25

a ≤ z ≤ x

z is picked to make the fourth derivative a maximum. Compute the fourth derivative.

Just substitute now. Use z = .25 because that makes the fourth derivative a maximum in the interval of 0 and .25.
I use the absolute value of the derivative.

Use the absolute value.

Solve for n by trying n=1, n=2, n=3, n=4 etc.


In mathematics, you don't understand things. You just get used to them.
If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.
Always satisfy the Prime Directive of getting the right answer above all else.

Offline

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB