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Lecture 13

This document discusses Taylor and Maclaurin series. It defines Taylor series as the series representation of the derivatives of a function f evaluated at a point a. Maclaurin series is the special case where a=0. It proves formulas for the coefficients of Taylor series and shows examples of deriving Taylor series for exponential and sine functions. It also discusses using Taylor polynomials to approximate functions and proves Taylor's theorem on the remainder term.

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José Mendoza
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views7 pages

Lecture 13

This document discusses Taylor and Maclaurin series. It defines Taylor series as the series representation of the derivatives of a function f evaluated at a point a. Maclaurin series is the special case where a=0. It proves formulas for the coefficients of Taylor series and shows examples of deriving Taylor series for exponential and sine functions. It also discusses using Taylor polynomials to approximate functions and proves Taylor's theorem on the remainder term.

Uploaded by

José Mendoza
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lecture 13: Taylor and Maclaurin Series

Today: Taylor’s Theorem, Taylor Series, Maclaurin Series

Let’s start our discussion with a function that can be represented by a power series. Suppose
that ∞
X
f (x) = cn (x − a)n = c0 + c1 (x − a) + c2 (x − a)2 + c3 (x − a)3 + · · ·
n=0

We first notice that


f (a) = c0 .
Now by Theorem 38, we can find the derivative of f (x) by differentiating the individual
terms of the power series.

X
f 0 (x) = ncn (x − a)n−1
n=1

Notice that the derivative is also a power series, so we can proceed to compute all of its
higher derivatives.

X
00
f (x) = n(n − 1)cn (x − a)n−2
n=2

X
f 000 (x) = n(n − 1)(n − 2)cn (x − a)n−3
n=3

······

X
(k)
f (x) = n(n − 1) · · · (n − k + 1)cn (x − a)n−k
n=k

When we evaluate the derivatives at a, we get the constant term in each power series

f 0 (a) = 1 · c1 , f 00 (a) = 2 · 1 · c2 , f 000 (a) = 3 · 2 · 1 · c3 , ... f (k) (a) = k! · ck

Solving the equation for the k-th coefficient ck , we get

f (k) (a)
ck =
k!
We have proved the following theorem.

Theorem 39. If f has a power series expansion at a with radius of convergence R > 0, that
is,

X
f (x) = cn (x − a)n for all |x − a| < R,
n=0

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then its coefficients are given by the formula

f (n) (a)
cn = .
n!
Remark. Substituting thiss formula back into the series, we see that if f has a power series
expansion at a, then it must be of the form

X f (n) (a)
f (x) = (x − a)n
n=0
n!
f 0 (a) f 00 (a) f 000 (a)
= f (a) + (x − a) + (x − a)2 + (x − a)3 + · · ·
1! 2! 3!
Definition. The series ∞
X f (n) (a)
(x − a)n
n=0
n!
is called the Taylor series of the function f at a. When a = 0, the series becomes

X f (n) (0)
xn ,
n=0
n!

and is given the special name Maclaurin series.

Example. We have seen in the previous lecture that



X
x xn
e = .
n=0
n!

is a power series expansion of the exponential function f (x) = ex . The power series is
centered at 0. The derivatives f (k) (x) = ex , so f (k) (0) = e0 = 1. So the Taylor series of the
function f at 0, or the Maclaurin series of f , is

X xn
,
n=0
n!

which agrees with the power series definition of the exponential function.

Definition. If f (x) is the sum of its Taylor series expansion, it is the limit of the sequence
of partial sums
Xn
f (k) (a)
Tn (x) = (x − a)k .
k=0
k!
We call the n-th partial sum the n-th-degree Taylor polynomial of f at a.

93
One important application of Taylor series is to approximate a function by its Taylor poly-
nomials. This is very useful in physics and engineering, where people only need a good
approximation for most scenarios, and polynomials are usually much easier to deal with
than a transcendental function. The following theorem justifies the use of Taylor polynomi-
als for function approximation.
Theorem 40 (Taylor’s Theorem). Let n ≥ 1 be an integer, and let a ∈ R be a point. If f (x)
is a function that is n times differentiable at the point a, then there exists a function hn (x)
such that
f (x) = Tn (x) + hn (x)(x − a)n , where lim hn (x) = 0.
x→a
The term
Rn (x) = f (x) − Tn (x) = hn (x)(x − a)n
is called the Peano form of the remainder.

Sometimes we would like a better estimate on the remainder term, so that we could have a
better understanding of how good the Taylor polynomials approximate the original functions.
However, we can only do this under stronger regularity assumptions on f (x).
Theorem 41 (Lagrange Form of the Remainder). Let n ≥ 1 be an integer, and let a ∈ R
be a point. If f (x) is a function that is n + 1 times differentiable on an open interval I
containing a, then for all x ∈ I, there exists a number z strictly between a and x such that
f (n+1) (z)
Rn (x) = (x − a)n+1
(n + 1)!
This is the Lagrange form of the remainder.
Example. Find the Maclaurin series for f (x) = sin(x), and show that its sum equals sin(x).
First, we need to find the derivatives of f (x) at 0:
f (x) = sin(x), f (0) = 0,
0
f (x) = cos(x), f 0 (0) = 1,
f 00 (x) = − sin(x), f 00 (0) = 0,
f 000 (x) = − cos(x), f 000 (0) = −1,
f (4) (x) = sin(x), f (4) (0) = 0,
······ ······
The derivatives repeat in a 4-cycle, so we can write the Maclaurin series as
f 0 (0) f 00 (0) 2 f 000 (0) 3 f (4) (0) 4
f (0) + x+ x + x + x + ···
1! 2! 3! 4!
X∞
x3 x5 x7 (−1)n 2n+1
= x− + − + ··· = x .
3! 5! 7! n=0
(2n + 1)!

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Use Ratio Test to find its radius of convergence:

(−1)n+1 x2n+3 (−1)n x2n+1 |x|2
lim = lim =0
n→∞ (2n + 3)! (2n + 1)! n→∞ (2n + 3)(2n + 2)

for all x ∈ R. Thus the radius of convergence R = ∞.


To show that the sum of the Maclaurin series equals to the function f (x) = sin(x), we
consider the n-th remainder term in Lagrange form

f (n+1) (z) n+1


Rn (x) = x ,
(n + 1)!

where z is a number strictly between 0 and x. Notice that f (n+1) (z) is a sine function or a
cosine function, so |f (n+1) (z)| ≤ 1. Then we have

xn+1 xn+1
− ≤ Rn (x) ≤
(n + 1)! (n + 1)!

However, we know that


xn+1
lim =0
n→∞ (n + 1)!

for all x ∈ R, so by Squeeze Theorem,

lim Rn (x) = 0
n→∞

for all x ∈ R. But since Rn (x) = f (x) − Tn (x), this implies that the Taylor polynomials
converges to f (x) for all x ∈ R, i.e., the sum of the Maclaurin series equals f (x) = sin(x).

Example. Find the Taylor series for f (x) = ex at a = 1.


All derivatives of f (x) are ex , so f (n) (1) = e for all n ≥ 0. Thus its Taylor series at 1 is

X∞
e
(x − 1)n
n=0
n!

with radius of convergence R = ∞. The following transformation verifies that we found the
right expression for the Taylor series:

X X∞
x x−1 (x − 1)n e
e =e·e =e = (x − 1)n .
n=0
n! n=0
n!

Exercise. Find the Maclaurin series of f (x) = cos(x).

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First, we find the derivatives of f (x) at 0:

f (x) = cos(x), f (0) = 1,


f 0 (x) = − sin(x), f 0 (0) = 0,
f 00 (x) = − cos(x), f 00 (0) = −1,
f 000 (x) = sin(x), f 000 (0) = 0,
f (4) (x) = cos(x), f (4) (0) = 1,
······ ······

The derivatives repeat in a 4-cycle, so we can write the Maclaurin series as

f 0 (0) f 00 (0) 2 f 000 (0) 3 f (4) (0) 4


f (0) + x+ x + x + x + ···
1! 2! 3! 4!
X∞
x 2 x4 x6 (−1)n 2n
= 1− + − + ··· = x .
2! 4! 6! n=0
(2n)!

We can verify by Ratio Test to see that its radius of convergence is R = ∞.


We can use the Lagrange form of the remainder to prove that the Maclaurin series converges
to the function f (x) = cos(x) for all x ∈ R. The detail is left as an exercise.

Example. Find the Maclaurin series for f (x) = x cos(x).


We know that the Maclaurin series for cos(x) is

X (−1)n
cos(x) = x2n
n=0
(2n)!

Thus ∞ ∞
X (−1)n X (−1)n
2n
f (x) = x cos(x) = x x = x2n+1 .
n=0
(2n)! n=0
(2n)!
2
Example. Find the Maclaurin series for f (x) = e−x .
We know that the Maclaurin series for the exponential function eu is

X un
eu =
n=0
n!

Substitute u = −x2 in the expression above, we get



X ∞
X
2 (−x2 )n (−1)n
e−x = = x2n .
n=0
n! n=0
n!

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Remark. The Taylor series / Maclaurin series of a infinitely differentiable function does not
necessarily equal to the original function. A proof is required to show that they are equal (or
not equal) for a function under consideration. We used the Lagrange form of the remainder
to prove it for sin(x) and used the differential equation method to prove it for ex .

We collect the following table of important Maclaurin series for reference.

Function Maclaurin Series



X
1
xn = 1 + x + x2 + x 3 + · · · R=1
1−x n=0

X xn x x2 x3
ex =1+ + + + ··· R=∞
n=0
n! 1! 2! 3!
X∞
(−1)n 2n+1 x3 x5 x7
sin(x) x =x− + − + ··· R=∞
n=0
(2n + 1)! 3! 5! 7!
X∞
(−1)n 2n x2 x4 x6
cos(x) x =1− + − + ··· R=∞
n=0
(2n)! 2! 4! 6!
X∞
(−1)n 2n+1 x3 x5 x7
arctan(x) x =x− + − + ··· R=1
n=0
(2n + 1) 3 5 7

X (−1)n−1 x2 x3 x4
ln(1 + x) xn = x − + − + ··· R=1
n=1
n 2 3 4

One application of Taylor series is to justify the use of L‘Hôpital’s Rule.


sin(x)
Example. Find the limit lim .
x→0 x
We could evaluate the limit with L‘Hôpital’s Rule, but let’s use the Maclaurin series instead.

x3 x5 x7
sin(x) x− + − + ···  x2 x4 x6 
lim = lim 3! 5! 7! = lim 1 − + − + · · · = 1.
x→0 x x→0 x x→0 3! 5! 7!
The result agrees with the answer we get from L‘Hôpital’s Rule:

sin(x) cos(x) cos(0)


lim = lim = = 1.
x→0 x x→0 1 1

Another important application of Taylor series is that they enable us to integrate functions
that we previous could not handle.

97
Z
2
Example. Evaluate e−x dx as an infinite series.

We know the Maclaurin series for the integrand is



X
−x2 (−1)n
e = x2n
n=0
n!

with radius of convergence R = ∞. Using term-by-term integration, we get


Z ∞
X
2 (−1)n
e−x dx = C + x2n+1
n=0
n!(2n + 1)

with radius of convergence R = ∞.

98

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