Sharp EL-W506T vs. Sharp EL-W516T
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02-04-2020, 04:26 PM
Post: #38
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RE: Sharp EL-W506T vs. Sharp EL-W516T
From the plot, it is hard to tell which converge area faster. (assuming we do not know the simpson numbers ahead of time) I tried a u-transformed t1 (blue curve), and compare against t2 (red curve). u-transformed t1 is both flatter and wider then t2, yet simpsons converge slower. To apply u-transformation to integral, keeping integral limit from 0 to 1, use this: \(\int _0 ^ 1 f(x) dx = \int _0 ^1 6u(1-u) f(u^2(3-2u))du \) My revised guess is bell-shaped curve accelerated convergence. Think Trapezoids. Note: Simpson's rule is trapezoids with corrections, S2n = T2n + (T2n-Tn)/3 Bell-shaped curve have inflection point at µ ± σ Within this region, trapezoids will under-estimate area Outside this region, trapezoids will over-estimate area. Summing all trapezoids will thus suppress overall errors. If the guess is right, all we needed is half a bell curve. Instead of shifting all the way to 1, say the shift is k \(\large \int _a ^ b {c \over r^2} dr = \int _{\log(a-k)} ^{\log(b-k)} {c\;e^x \over (e^x + k)^2} dx\) Solve for k so that integrand at x=log(a-k) is flat. XCas> s := numer(diff(c*e^x/(e^x+k)^2)) → (-c)*exp(x)^2+c*k*exp(x) XCas> x := log(a-k) XCas> solve(s=0, k) → [a/2, a] Since x=log(a-a) = -∞, we have k=a/2 Here is the trapezoid and simpson numbers for k=a/2 It converge so fast that 64 intervals have both numbers converged ! Code: n trapezoids simspons Due to error cancellations, trapezoids numbers actually converge slightly faster |
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