enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Series expansion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Series_expansion

    A Laurent series is a generalization of the Taylor series, allowing terms with negative exponents; it takes the form = and converges in an annulus. [6] In particular, a Laurent series can be used to examine the behavior of a complex function near a singularity by considering the series expansion on an annulus centered at the singularity.

  3. Taylor series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taylor_series

    A Taylor series is also called a Maclaurin series when 0 is the point where the derivatives are considered, after Colin Maclaurin, who made extensive use of this special case of Taylor series in the 18th century.

  4. Euler–Maclaurin formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler–Maclaurin_formula

    For example, many asymptotic expansions are derived from the formula, and Faulhaber's formula for the sum of powers is an immediate consequence. The formula was discovered independently by Leonhard Euler and Colin Maclaurin around 1735. Euler needed it to compute slowly converging infinite series while Maclaurin used it to calculate integrals.

  5. Colin Maclaurin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Maclaurin

    Maclaurin attributed the series to Brook Taylor, though the series was known before to Newton and Gregory, and in special cases to Madhava of Sangamagrama in fourteenth century India. [6] Nevertheless, Maclaurin received credit for his use of the series, and the Taylor series expanded around 0 is sometimes known as the Maclaurin series. [7]

  6. Binomial series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binomial_series

    where the power series on the right-hand side of is expressed in terms of the (generalized) binomial coefficients ():= () (+)!.Note that if α is a nonnegative integer n then the x n + 1 term and all later terms in the series are 0, since each contains a factor of (n − n).

  7. Logarithmic distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logarithmic_distribution

    In probability and statistics, the logarithmic distribution (also known as the logarithmic series distribution or the log-series distribution) is a discrete probability distribution derived from the Maclaurin series expansion ⁡ = + + +.

  8. Cumulant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumulant

    This expansion is a Maclaurin series, so the n th cumulant can be obtained by differentiating the above expansion n times and evaluating the result at zero: [1] = (). If the moment-generating function does not exist, the cumulants can be defined in terms of the relationship between cumulants and moments discussed later.

  9. Generating function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generating_function

    The left-hand side is the Maclaurin series expansion of the right-hand side. Alternatively, the equality can be justified by multiplying the power series on the left by 1 − x, and checking that the result is the constant power series 1 (in other words, that all coefficients except the one of x 0 are equal to 0). Moreover, there can be no ...