Taylor series
sin(x) and Taylor approximations, polynomials of degree 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 and 13.
If a = 0, the series is also called a Maclaurin series.
The importance of such a power series representation is threefold. First, differentiation and integration of power series can be performed term by term and is hence particularly easy. Second, an analytic function can be uniquely extended to a holomorphic function defined on an open disk in the complex plane, which makes the whole machinery of complex analysis available. Third, the (truncated) series can be used to compute function values approximately.
The function e-1/x² is not analytic: the Taylor series is 0, although the function is not.
Some functions cannot be written as Taylor series because they have a singularity; in these cases, one can often still achieve a series expansion if one allows also negative powers of the variable x; see Laurent series. For example, f(x) = exp(−1/x²) can be written as a Laurent series.
The Parker-Sockacki theorem is a recent advance in finding Taylor series which are solutions to differential equations. This theorem is an expansion on the Picard iteration.
| Table of contents |
|
2 Multiple dimensions 3 History |
Several important Taylor series expansions follow. All these expansions are also valid for complex arguments x.
Exponential function and natural logarithm:
List of Taylor series
Geometric series:
The Taylor series may be generalised to functions of more than one variable with
The Taylor series is named for mathematician Brook Taylor, who first published the power series formulat in 1715.Multiple dimensions
History