Maclaurin Series Calculator
Maclaurin Series Expansion
Expand functions into infinite power series around x=0. Calculate approximations using derivatives at zero with error bounds.
Maclaurin Series Results
Approximation at x = 0.5
Using 5 terms of the series
Exact value: 0.4794255386
Error: 0.0000000000
f(0) = 0
f'(0) = 1
f''(0) = 0
Convergence Information
Radius of convergence: ∞
Interval of convergence: (-∞, ∞)
Series type: Alternating
Common Maclaurin Series
Maclaurin series approximates functions using polynomials. The approximation improves with more terms but may diverge outside the convergence interval.
What is Maclaurin Series?
Maclaurin Series is a special case of Taylor series expansion centered at zero (a=0). It represents a function as an infinite sum of terms calculated from the derivatives of the function at zero:
f(x) = f(0) + f'(0)x + f''(0)x²/2! + f'''(0)x³/3! + ... + f⁽ⁿ⁾(0)xⁿ/n! + ...
Maclaurin series are used to approximate functions that are difficult to compute directly, solve differential equations, and analyze function behavior near zero.
Common Maclaurin Series Expansions
sin(x)
All real x
Alternating odd powers
cos(x)
All real x
Alternating even powers
eˣ
All real x
All positive terms
ln(1+x)
|x| < 1
Alternating series
Maclaurin Series Formula and Derivation
General Formula
The Maclaurin series for a function f(x) with derivatives of all orders at 0 is:
f(x) = Σ[n=0 to ∞] [f⁽ⁿ⁾(0) / n!] × xⁿ
Step-by-Step Derivation for sin(x)
- Function: f(x) = sin(x)
- Derivatives:
- f(0) = sin(0) = 0
- f'(x) = cos(x), f'(0) = 1
- f''(x) = -sin(x), f''(0) = 0
- f'''(x) = -cos(x), f'''(0) = -1
- f⁽⁴⁾(x) = sin(x), f⁽⁴⁾(0) = 0
- Pattern: Derivatives cycle every 4 terms: 0, 1, 0, -1, 0, 1, 0, -1, ...
- Series: Only odd derivatives (1st, 3rd, 5th, ...) are non-zero: ±1
- Result: sin(x) = x - x³/3! + x⁵/5! - x⁷/7! + ...
Applications of Maclaurin Series
Mathematics & Physics
- Function approximation: Compute values of transcendental functions
- Limit calculations: Evaluate limits using series expansions
- Differential equations: Power series solutions to ODEs
- Physics computations: Small angle approximations (sinθ ≈ θ, cosθ ≈ 1 - θ²/2)
Engineering & Computer Science
- Numerical analysis: Algorithm implementations for special functions
- Signal processing: Fourier series connections
- Computer graphics: Fast trigonometric computations
- Error analysis: Bounding approximation errors
Economics & Finance
- Compound interest: eˣ series for continuous compounding
- Option pricing: Taylor approximations in Black-Scholes
- Risk analysis: Sensitivity analysis using derivatives
- Economic models: Linearization of nonlinear systems
Convergence Properties
| Function | Maclaurin Series | Convergence Interval | Convergence Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| sin(x) | x - x³/3! + x⁵/5! - ... | (-∞, ∞) | Converges for all x |
| cos(x) | 1 - x²/2! + x⁴/4! - ... | (-∞, ∞) | Converges for all x |
| eˣ | 1 + x + x²/2! + x³/3! + ... | (-∞, ∞) | Converges for all x |
| ln(1+x) | x - x²/2 + x³/3 - x⁴/4 + ... | (-1, 1] | Conditional convergence |
| 1/(1-x) | 1 + x + x² + x³ + ... | (-1, 1) | Geometric series |
| arctan(x) | x - x³/3 + x⁵/5 - x⁷/7 + ... | [-1, 1] | Alternating series |
Error Analysis and Remainder Term
Lagrange Remainder
The error in using n terms of Maclaurin series is given by:
Rₙ(x) = [f⁽ⁿ⁺¹⁾(c) / (n+1)!] × xⁿ⁺¹
where c is some number between 0 and x. This provides an upper bound for the approximation error.
Example: Error bound for sin(0.5) using 3 terms
- Series: sin(0.5) ≈ 0.5 - 0.5³/6 + 0.5⁵/120
- Next derivative: f⁽⁷⁾(x) = -cos(x), max |f⁽⁷⁾(c)| ≤ 1
- Error bound: |R₆| ≤ (1/5040) × 0.5⁷ ≈ 0.000001
- Actual error: Much smaller than bound
Common Examples
sin(0.5)
e¹ = e
cos(1)
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q: What's the difference between Maclaurin and Taylor series?
A: Maclaurin series is a special case of Taylor series where the expansion is centered at 0 (a=0). Taylor series can be centered at any point a, while Maclaurin series is specifically at a=0. All Maclaurin series are Taylor series, but not vice versa.
Q: How many terms do I need for accurate approximation?
A: It depends on the function and x value. For sin(x) and cos(x), 5-10 terms give excellent accuracy for |x| < 2. For eˣ, more terms are needed as x increases. Use the remainder term to estimate required terms for desired accuracy.
Q: Can all functions be expanded as Maclaurin series?
A: No, only functions that are infinitely differentiable at 0 have Maclaurin series. Even then, the series may converge only in a limited interval or not converge to the function outside that interval (e.g., ln(1+x) only converges for |x| < 1).
Q: How do I find the radius of convergence?
A: Use the ratio test: R = lim[n→∞] |aₙ/aₙ₊₁|, where aₙ are the series coefficients. For power series Σ aₙxⁿ, the radius is 1/lim sup |aₙ|¹/ⁿ. Test endpoints separately for convergence/divergence.
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