Revision as of 14:45, 26 October 2008 by Jhunsber (Talk)

Yikes, wish I had better experience with series.

This seems plausible and all, and I can see how it would work for the challenge problem, but it seems to me that other averages may not actually make the error smaller, which is a fact I think you realize. I guess only sums that oscillate around their ultimate value will act this way. I'd rather take the easy way out and take more points. --John Mason

  • Well, I also realized about halfway through that it most definitely isn't Taylor Series is it? Major Brain fart.

But yes, the averages of averages should oscillate around the actual average since each average would go back and forth between being too big and too small, and since their consecutive we can show how the error gets smaller (Whether the actual error gets smaller I'm not sure, but I know that I can guarantee it is within a certain amount with more and more accuracy.

Last night I had a much better idea on how to show the average of consecutive averages, which I will put in the page when I have time. It involves Rows of Pascal's triangle over powers of two.His Awesomeness, Josh Hunsberger

  • I've decided to start completely over from scratch. I'm going to start from the beginning, 1+r+r^2 and all. From there I will show the error of estimating pi and then the decreasing error by using multimeans. His Awesomeness, Josh Hunsberger
  • Okay, so I decided to see what wikipedia has to say:

π can also be calculated using purely mathematical methods. Most formulas used for calculating the value of π have desirable mathematical properties, but are difficult to understand without a background in trigonometry_MA181Fall2008bell and calculus_MA181Fall2008bell. However, some are quite simple, such as this form of the Gregory-Leibniz series:<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

$ \pi = \frac{4}{1}-\frac{4}{3}+\frac{4}{5}-\frac{4}{7}+\frac{4}{9}-\frac{4}{11}\cdots\! $.

While that series is easy to write and calculate, it is not immediately obvious why it yields π. In addition, this series converges so slowly that 300 terms are not sufficient to calculate π correctly to 2 decimal places.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> However, by computing this series in a somewhat more clever way by taking the midpoints of partial sums, it can be made to converge much faster. Let

$ \pi_{0,1} = \frac{4}{1}, \pi_{0,2} =\frac{4}{1}-\frac{4}{3}, \pi_{0,3} =\frac{4}{1}-\frac{4}{3}+\frac{4}{5}, \pi_{0,4} =\frac{4}{1}-\frac{4}{3}+\frac{4}{5}-\frac{4}{7}, \cdots\! $

and then define

$ \pi_{i,j} = \frac{\pi_{i-1,j}+\pi_{i-1,j+1}}{2} $ for all $ i,j\ge 1 $

then computing $ \pi_{10,10} $ will take similar computation time to computing 150 terms of the original series in a brute force manner, and $ \pi_{10,10}=3.141592653\cdots $, correct to 9 decimal places. This computation is an example of the Van Wijngaarden transformation_MA181Fall2008bell.<ref>A. van Wijngaarden, in: Cursus: Wetenschappelijk Rekenen B, Process Analyse, Stichting Mathematisch Centrum, (Amsterdam, 1965) pp. 51-60.</ref>

This makes me slightly less excited, but I will try my best to explain it to you all why it works. His Awesomeness, Josh Hunsberger

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