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#1 2011-03-12 03:29:10

Natkirky
Member
Registered: 2006-10-17
Posts: 21

Maclaurin Series

Hi,

I am doing first year uni maths and i was wondering if someone could please help with the following question?

By multiplying together known Maclaurin Series obtain the expansion of (cos2x)log(1+x²) up to term x^6.

I have found co2x to be 1- 2x² + 2/3x^4 - 4/45x^6 + ...

and log(1+x²) to be tan-¹x = x - 1/3x³ + 1/5x^5 +...

By multiplying these values together I am not getting the correct answer and I don't have a clue where I'm going wrong.  The solution I have is x² - 5/2x^4 + 2x^6.

I would be grateful for any help or corrections if I am doing this completely wrong.

Thank you.

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#2 2011-03-12 03:45:19

DLF24
Member
Registered: 2011-02-11
Posts: 3

Re: Maclaurin Series

Your series for log(1+x^2) is incorrect. Where is tan-¹x coming from?

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#3 2011-03-12 09:24:07

bobbym
bumpkin
From: Bumpkinland
Registered: 2009-04-12
Posts: 109,606

Re: Maclaurin Series

Hi Natkirky;

Your problem starts with log(x^2+1) ≠ arctan(x).

I understand what you were attempting to do. In numerical analysis we build one series from another. What you wanted was this:


From those you can build the Mclaurin series for log(x^2+1).


In mathematics, you don't understand things. You just get used to them.
If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.
Always satisfy the Prime Directive of getting the right answer above all else.

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