How to find the power series of rational functions of type, e.g. 1 1

delirija7z

delirija7z

Answered question

2022-07-07

How to find the power series of rational functions of type, e.g.
1 1 6 x + 12 x 2 , 6 x 1 6 x + 12 x 2
where denominator can't be factorized over the real domain.
Is there a way to use the method of undetermined coefficients (by completing the square), or is it necessary to use complex domain and trigonometry?

Answer & Explanation

potamanixv

potamanixv

Beginner2022-07-08Added 15 answers

We obtain
1 1 6 x + 12 x 2 = 1 1 6 x ( 1 2 x ) = k = 0 ( 6 x ) k ( 1 2 x ) k = k = 0 ( 6 x ) k j = 0 k ( k j ) ( 2 x ) j = 1 + 6 x + 24 x 2 + 72 x 3 + 144 x 4 + 0 x 5 1728 x 6 10368 x 7 41472 x 8
It is convenient to use the coefficient of operator [ x n ] to extract the coefficient of x n .
We get
[ x n ] 1 1 6 x + 12 x 2 = [ x n ] k = 0 ( 6 x ) k j = 0 k ( k j ) ( 2 x ) j (1) = k = 0 n 6 k [ x n k ] j = 0 k ( k j ) ( 2 x ) j = k = 0 n 6 k ( k n k ) ( 2 ) n k (2) = ( 2 ) n k = 0 n ( k n k ) ( 3 ) k
and find this way a summation formula for the coefficient of the power series.
Comment:
1. In (1) we use the linearity of the coefficient of operator and the rule [ x p ] x q A ( x ) = [ x p q ] A ( x )
2. In (2) we select the coefficient of x n k .
Note: Since the zeros of f ( x ) = 1 6 x + 12 x 2 are non-real, we don't expect to get a closed formula of the binomial sum formula in real numbers only. In fact the following is valid
k = 0 n ( n k k ) z k = 1 1 + 4 z ( ( 1 + 1 + 4 z 2 ) n + 1 ( 1 1 + 4 z 2 ) n + 1 )
Replacing the index k with n k gives
k = 0 n ( k n k ) z n k = 1 1 + 4 z ( ( 1 + 1 + 4 z 2 ) n + 1 ( 1 1 + 4 z 2 ) n + 1 )
This expression evaluated at z = 1 3 and multiplied with ( 2 ) n gives the coefficient of the power series and we obtain
( 2 ) n k = 0 n ( k n k ) ( 3 ) k = i 3 2 ( ( 1 i 3 ) n + 1 ( 1 + i 3 ) n + 1 ) 3 n

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