View Full Version : Binomial Expansion For Rational Index . Please help
Hi
I wanted to know what is the expansion of (1+x)^n when n is a rational number and |x|<1 ...
Please let me know as soon as possible..
Thanks for your help
Sincerely
Sparsh
Hootenanny
Apr18-06, 09:20 AM
(1+x)^{n} = 1 + nx + \frac{n(n-1)}{1\cdot 2}x^{2} + ... + \frac{n(n-1)...(n-r+1)}{1\cdot 2 ... r}x^{r}
Where |x|<1 and n is any real number. This can be derived from the general binomial expansion of (a+b)^n.
Regards,
~Hoot
HallsofIvy
Apr18-06, 09:24 AM
I assume you know that, for n a positive integer
(1+ x)^n= 1+ nx+ ... + _nC_i x^i+ ...
where
_nC_i= \frac{n!}{i!(n-i)!}= \frac{n(n-1)...(n-i+1)}{i!}
For n a rational number, basically the same formula is true. Only now _nC_i is never 0 so we get an infinite sum.
For example, if n= 1/2 then _{\frac{1}{2}}C_1= \frac{1}{2}, _{\frac{1}{2}}C_2= \frac{\frac{1}{2}(\frac{1}{2}-1)}{2}= -\frac{1}{8}, _{\frac{1}{2}}C_3= \frac{\frac{1}{2}(\frac{1}{2}-1)(\frac{1}{2}-2)}{6}= \frac{1}{16}, etc. so that
(1+ x)^{\frac{1}{2}}= 1+ \frac{1}{2}x-\frac{1}{8}x^2+ \frac{1}{16}x^4-...
exactly as you would get from the Taylor's series.
Thanks to both .
The post by HallsofIvy was particularly useful .
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