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View Full Version : Anyone Watch Fringe - Mysterious Equation


erok81
Apr23-11, 05:25 PM
So I was watching Fringe this morning and this came up. Then the character ominously solved it with a zero. I could solve the integral but there is a symbol that appears in the beginning that I am not familiar with. Plus, with the emphasis on him solving it with zero, maybe this is a famous equation and something bad happens when it equals zero. :rofl:

Here is the formula in question (the best I can see it anyway).

n(s)=\frac{1}{\Gamma (s)} \int_{0}^{\infty} \frac{x^{s-1}}{e^{x}+1}dx

And here is a screen shot of his notepad. Which includes a few other things.

jhae2.718
Apr23-11, 05:28 PM
\Gamma (s) is the Gamma function, which is an extension of the factorial function to the reals and complex numbers.

pergradus
Apr23-11, 06:39 PM
Wtf is the gamma function doing on fox???

Leptos
Apr23-11, 08:04 PM
Wtf is the gamma function doing on fox???
Satisfying a recursion formula I suppose :uhh:

erok81
Apr23-11, 08:24 PM
Sounds like they just picked something that looked cool. I was hoping for an actual something, but I guess not. :redface:

ideasrule
Apr23-11, 08:45 PM
You can easily show that the equation cannot be 0 for any value of s, because the integrand is always non-zero. The only exception is for the poles of the gamma function (s=0, -1, -2...).

By the way, if e^x+1 were instead e^x-1, n(s) would be a definition of the Riemann zeta function. The previous line is R(s)>1/2, which makes me think this has something to do with the Riemann hypothesis.

jhae2.718
Apr23-11, 08:48 PM
It's probably supposed to be the zeta function.