Calculus II
Class Notes, 3/10/99
The function f(x) = `sqrt(x + 2) is to be expanded about a = -1.
- The first three derivatives are easily calculated as shown below, and their values at a
= -1 are indicated.
- a = -1 and the values of the
derivatives at a = -1 are substituted into the form of the Taylor series and simplified.
- The polynomial show in the last
line is the Taylor polynomial of degree three.
Video Clip #1
The Taylor polynomial of degree three for f(x) = `sqrt(x) about x = 1 is indicated in
the second line below.
- The Taylor polynomial for f(x+2) = `sqrt(x+2) is easily found by substituting x+2 for x
in the original Taylor polynomial.
- The resulting Taylor polynomial is expressed in powers of (x + 1), and so constitutes an
expansion of `sqrt(x+2) about x = -1.
- Since a graphical picture shows that `sqrt(x+2) is just `sqrt(x) shifted 2 units to the
left, it makes sense that the value of a about which the sequence is expanded is also
shifted 2 units to the left, from a = 1 to a = -1.
Video Clip #2
In the figure below we directly obtain the degree-4 expansion of f(x) = cos(2x) about a
= `pi / 8.
- The first four derivatives are as indicated.
- The values of these derivatives at a = `pi / 8 are calculated and substituted into the
form of the Taylor polynomial.
- The Taylor polynomial will be expressed in powers of (x - `pi / 8), as indicated.
If we wished to use the expansion of cos(2x) to find expansion for cos(x), we could
find f(x/2).
- The Taylor polynomial would then give us an expansion about a = `pi / 4, as we see from
the algebra in the figure below.
- A power of (x / 2 - `pi / 8) is a power of 1/2 (x - `pi/4); by incorporating the power
of the factor 1/2 into the coefficient, we obtain a power of (x - `pi / 4).
- It is easy to verify that the final result is identical to the expansion we would get
for cos(x) using the Taylor formula.
- Thus when f(x) represents a Taylor expansion about some value a, f(x/2) will represent a
Taylor expansion about 2a; more generally f(kx) will represent a Taylor expansion about a
/ k.
Video Clip #3
The series in the figure below has coefficients 1, 1/4, 1/9, 1/16, ..., 1/n^2.
- It follows that | C(n+1) | / | Cn | = (n / (n+1) ) ^2 has a limit of 1 as n ->
infinity.
- It follows that the series has radius a convergence R = 1.
Video Clip #4