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riddles >> putnam exam (pure math) >> square root of the derivative
(Message started by: Grimbal on Jul 2nd, 2004, 1:14pm)

Title: square root of the derivative
Post by Grimbal on Jul 2nd, 2004, 1:14pm
Since there are a number of people knowledgeable in math around here, I'd like to ask about an idea I had some time ago and never found out if it works.

If you take the derivation operator D, you can see that it operates very regularily on polynomials.
   Dxn = n xn-1.
And if you apply it k times
   Dkxn = n!/(n-k)! xn-k
You could want to generalize and replace k by a real a and replace the factorial by the gamma function.
   Daxn = [smiley=cgamma.gif](n)/[smiley=cgamma.gif](n-a) xn-a
And then, you could extend Da to any regular function that can be written as an infinite sum of xn.

So, for instance, we could define an operator D1/2 such that applied twice, it is equivalent to the derivation.

Does this kind of thing exist?  If yes, how does D1/2sin(x) look?

Title: Re: square root of the derivative
Post by THUDandBLUNDER on Jul 2nd, 2004, 2:24pm
These are called fractional derivatives (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/FractionalDerivative.html).

This (http://www2.machinedesign.com/derivatives/fractionalderivatives_part1.doc) and this (http://www2.machinedesign.com/derivatives/fractionalderivatives_part2.doc) explain them well.


Title: Re: square root of the derivative
Post by towr on Jul 2nd, 2004, 2:24pm
[e] damnit, Thud beat me by a fraction of a minute..  >:([/e]


on 07/02/04 at 13:14:30, Grimbal wrote:
Does this kind of thing exist?  If yes, how does D1/2sin(x) look?
Well, you've just defined it, if it wasn't so allready.
And as sin(x) = (ei x - e-i x)/i (if I'm not mistaken)
and ex = [sum]xk/k!
So you can just apply the operator you just defined

([sum][smiley=cgamma.gif](k + 1)/[smiley=cgamma.gif](k-a + 1) (i x)k-a/k! + [sum] ][smiley=cgamma.gif](k + 1)/[smiley=cgamma.gif](k-a + 1)  (-i x)k-a/k!)/i

(n! = [smiley=cgamma.gif](n+1), so I assume you meant Daxn = [smiley=cgamma.gif](n+1)/[smiley=cgamma.gif](n-a +1) xn-a )


Title: Re: square root of the derivative
Post by BNC on Jul 2nd, 2004, 2:50pm

on 07/02/04 at 14:24:44, towr wrote:
And as sin(x) = (ei x - e-i x)/i (if I'm not mistaken)

almost... sin(x) = (ei x - e-i x)/2i

Title: Re: square root of the derivative
Post by Grimbal on Jul 2nd, 2004, 2:54pm
I wonder what you can not find on Wolfram's MathWorld.

I have been looking at that site, they even give the expression of the fractional derivative of sin(z).
  http://functions.wolfram.com/ElementaryFunctions/Sin/20/03/0001/
but it uses the "regularized generalized hypergeometric function", which I have no idea what it looks like.  I don't even know if the half-derivative is real.



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