Let f(x) and g(x) be two Taylor series such that: f(x)=sum_(n=0)^oo(−1)^n a(n)x^n and g(x)=sum_(n=0)^oo b(n)x^n, for a(n)>0 and b(n)>0. can we extract the asymptotic behavior of these two taylor series for x->oo?

Rosemary Chase

Rosemary Chase

Answered question

2022-11-03

Let f ( x ) and g ( x ) be two Taylor series such that:
f ( x ) = n = 0 ( 1 ) n a ( n ) x n
and
g ( x ) = n = 0 b ( n ) x n
for a ( n ) > 0 and b ( n ) > 0.
Can we extract the asymptotic behavior of these two taylor series for x ?

Answer & Explanation

Faith Wise

Faith Wise

Beginner2022-11-04Added 17 answers

Asymptotic expansions are essentially different from Taylor and Laurent expansions and cannot be easily deduced from one another. To call an expansion of f ( z ) as z z 0 asymptotic you need to find an infinite sequence of functions w n ( z ) such that lim z z 0 | w n + 1 ( z ) / w n ( z ) | = 0, or w n + 1 = o ( w n ( z ) ) and obtain expansion of the form
f ( z ) = n = 1 N a n w n ( z ) + o ( w N )
where coefficients a n are determined as follows:
a n = lim z z 0 { f ( z ) n = 1 N 1 a n w n ( z ) w N ( z ) }
To get a notion of the difference between the domains where power series converges and an asymptotic expansion is valid, consider the following example.
I = 0 e z t 1 + t 2 d t
where ( z ) > 0.Expanding the denominator in the geometric series which converges in the circle | t | < 1 and integrating term by term we obtain:
I = 1 z 2 ! z 3 + 4 ! z 5 . . . + ( 1 ) n 1 ( 2 n 2 ) ! z 2 n 1 + R n ( z )
where
R n ( z ) = ( 1 ) n 0 e z t t 2 n 1 + t 2 d t
Now
| R n ( z ) | 0 e x t t 2 n d t = ( 2 n ) ! x 2 n + 1
Let z 0 and ( π / 2 ) + α arg z ( π / 2 ) α, 0 < α < π / 2. Then x sin α, hence
| R n ( z ) | ( 2 n ) ! ( sin α ) 2 n + 1 1 | z | 2 n + 1
For a fixed n, lim | z | | R n ( z ) | = 0. Hence, even that the series does not converge, for large | z | and a finite number of terms it is a good approximation to the function. In contrast working with power series, for a given z approximation is better, the more terms of the series we take. The purpose of the example os also to show that whereas Taylor (Laurent) expansion converges within a circle (annulus), the domain where asymptotic expansion is valid has the shape of an angle in the complex plane.

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