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Binomial approximation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The binomial approximation is useful for approximately calculating powers of sums of 1 and a small number x. It states that

It is valid when and where and may be real or complex numbers.

The benefit of this approximation is that is converted from an exponent to a multiplicative factor. This can greatly simplify mathematical expressions (as in the example below) and is a common tool in physics.[1]

The approximation can be proven several ways, and is closely related to the binomial theorem. By Bernoulli's inequality, the left-hand side of the approximation is greater than or equal to the right-hand side whenever and .

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Transcription

Derivations

Using linear approximation

The function

is a smooth function for x near 0. Thus, standard linear approximation tools from calculus apply: one has

and so

Thus

By Taylor's theorem, the error in this approximation is equal to for some value of that lies between 0 and x. For example, if and , the error is at most . In little o notation, one can say that the error is , meaning that .

Using Taylor series

The function

where and may be real or complex can be expressed as a Taylor series about the point zero.

If and , then the terms in the series become progressively smaller and it can be truncated to

This result from the binomial approximation can always be improved by keeping additional terms from the Taylor series above. This is especially important when starts to approach one, or when evaluating a more complex expression where the first two terms in the Taylor series cancel (see example).

Sometimes it is wrongly claimed that is a sufficient condition for the binomial approximation. A simple counterexample is to let and . In this case but the binomial approximation yields . For small but large , a better approximation is:

Example

The binomial approximation for the square root, , can be applied for the following expression,

where and are real but .

The mathematical form for the binomial approximation can be recovered by factoring out the large term and recalling that a square root is the same as a power of one half.

Evidently the expression is linear in when which is otherwise not obvious from the original expression.

Generalization

While the binomial approximation is linear, it can be generalized to keep the quadratic term in the Taylor series:

Applied to the square root, it results in:

Quadratic example

Consider the expression:

where and . If only the linear term from the binomial approximation is kept then the expression unhelpfully simplifies to zero

While the expression is small, it is not exactly zero. So now, keeping the quadratic term:

This result is quadratic in which is why it did not appear when only the linear terms in were kept.

References

  1. ^ For example calculating the multipole expansion. Griffiths, D. (1999). Introduction to Electrodynamics (Third ed.). Pearson Education, Inc. pp. 146–148.
This page was last edited on 14 May 2024, at 22:00
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