The Length of the de Rham Curve
✍ Scribed by Serge Dubuc; Jean-Louis Merrien; Paul Sablonniére
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 192 KB
- Volume
- 223
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-247X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The length L of the de Rham curve is the common limit of two monotonic sequences of lengths l n and L n of inscribed and circumscribed polygons, respectively. Numerical computations show that their convergence is linear with the same convergence rate. This result is easy to prove for the parabola. For arbitrary de Rham curves, we prove two nearby results. First, the existence of a limit q ∈ 0 1 of the sequence of ratios L n+1 -L / L n -L implies the convergence to the same limit of the two sequences l n+1 -L / l n -L and L n+1 -l n+1 / L n -l n . Second, the sequence L n+1 -L n is bounded by a convergent geometric sequence. In practice, this allows us to accelerate the convergence of both sequences by standard extrapolation algorithms.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The classical Fischer decomposition of spinor‐valued polynomials is a key result on solutions of the Dirac equation in the Euclidean space . As is well‐known, it can be understood as an irreducible decomposition with respect to the so‐called __L__‐action of the Pin group __Pin__(__m__). But, in Clif