Manipulating the Maclaurin Series for e^(-4x^4) to Solve an Integral

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Homework Statement



Assume that e^x equals its Maclaurin series for all x.
Use the Maclaurin series for e^(-4 x^4) to evaluate the integralYour answer will be an infinite series. Use the first two terms to estimate its value.

Homework Equations



Inline37.gif


The Attempt at a Solution


I've tried using the e^x series above to solve the given series. From what I understand, I am suppose to manipulate the e^x series so that it becomes e^(-4x^4). I am new to these forums, and I don't know another way to show what I'm doing, so I'll post an image of what I have so far (which is incorrect):Can anyone point me in the right direction or tell me what my mistakes are?
Thanks a lot and sorry if I broke any forum etiquette rules here! It's my first time here. =)
 
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No rules broken. Welcome to the forums! You want (-4*x^4)^n. Not -4*(x^4)^n. You get powers of the -4 as well.
 
Hey Dick sorry for the late reply, I had to run out real quick, but I tried your suggestion of (-4x^4)^n. However, I am still getting an incorrect answer. I brought out -1/n! and then integrated (4x^4)^n. Which should give me 4^nx(x^4)^n/4n+1?
 
Then you get powers of the -1 as well. (-1)^n. Your power on the x isn't right either in the integral. You had it right before.
 
Dick said:
Then you get powers of the -1 as well. (-1)^n. Your power on the x isn't right either in the integral. You had it right before.

I'm afraid I don't understand. Can you elaborate on this please?
 
(-4)^1=-4. (-4)^2=16. (-4)^3=-64. (-4)^4=256. They aren't all the same sign. You can't factor the (-1) out.
 
so you're saying I should get (-4x)^(4n+1)/(4n+1)n! ... ?
 
No. (-4x^4)^n=(-4)^n*(x^4)^n=(-4)^n*x^(4n). Now integrate the power.
 
Dick said:
No. (-4x^4)^n=(-4)^n*(x^4)^n=(-4)^n*x^(4n). Now integrate the power.
By integrate the powers you mean -4^n*x^(4n) = -4^(n+1)*x^(4n+1)/(4n+1)n! ...??

Sorry, English is not my native tongue.
 
  • #10
By 'power' I meant the x^(4n). Sorry. (-4)^n is a constant in each term. It doesn't depend on x. You only apply the power law to x^(4n).
 
  • #11
Dick said:
By 'power' I meant the x^(4n). Sorry. (-4)^n is a constant in each term. It doesn't depend on x. You only apply the power law to x^(4n).

Ah, I see it more clearly now, but once I plug in x, which is .1, I should get (-4)^n*(0.1)^(4n+1)/(4n+1)n! I then plugged in 0 and 1 for n to test the first two terms of the series, but my answer came out wrong again. =( Please help.
 
  • #12
Can you show us the first two terms of the series you used and the numbers you got? Remember the first term is n=0. That term is pretty simple.
 
  • #13
Sure, here is what I've done below:

http://img261.imageshack.us/img261/9651/mathhelp.jpg
 
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  • #14
I get 0.099992. I didn't round off. Could that be the problem? Otherwise, it looks fine.
 
  • #15
Dick said:
I get 0.099992. I didn't round off. Could that be the problem? Otherwise, it looks fine.

I left off the two at the end when I entered my solution, and webwork counted that as incorrect. I just tried your solution with the extra 2 and now it is correct. Silly webwork. =) Thanks for you patience throughout helping me find this solution. Hopefully we can do business again in the future!
 
  • #16
You're welcome. You know where to find me. BTW your English is excellent. You even spell words correctly. Native speakers don't do that any more.
 

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