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gmalivuk wrote:Yes. And if wishes were horses, wishing wells would fill up very quickly with drowned horses.King Author wrote:If space (rather, distance) is an illusion, it'd be possible for one meta-me to experience both body's sensory inputs.
HeWhoCouldn'tThinkOfAUsername wrote:I was just wondering if anyone had the answers to a few Mathematical Problems I was considering. This mainly my own musings, and I'm limited in that I'm only knowledge up to Single Variable Calculus, and after that I know a little Differential Equations and Linear Algebra. Basically I'm looking for some continuous function that passes through the following sets of numbers, preferably something Analytic:
0, sin(1), sin(sin(2), sin(sin(sin(3), sin(sin(sin(sin(4),...
HeWhoCouldn'tThinkOfAUsername wrote:Also, would happened to know if this function is continuous:
x= sum from i=-infinity to infinity aix10i (sorry I had to write that out, I'm not sure how to write Sigma Notation online)
f(x)=sum from i=-infinity to infinity rd(ai+ai-1)x10i, with rd(ai+ai-1) being equivalent to adding all the digits of (ai+ai-1)(for example, rd(10)=1, rd(11)=2, rd(1.32)=6, so on and so forth).
I'd appreciate anyone's input on the matter, thank you for your time.
HeWhoCouldn'tThinkOfAUsername wrote:I'm confused, what is the function for say a non-integer x?
gmalivuk wrote:Yes. And if wishes were horses, wishing wells would fill up very quickly with drowned horses.King Author wrote:If space (rather, distance) is an illusion, it'd be possible for one meta-me to experience both body's sensory inputs.
Qaanol wrote:Or did you mean a function that passes through the points (0, 0), (1, sin(1)), (2, sin(sin(2))), etc.? If this is what you meant, then there definitely is an analytic function passing through those points. Given any countable subset of ℂ with no limit points, and any arbitrary complex values for each point in the set, there is always an analytic function through those points.
Qaanol wrote:Definitely not continuous. Not even well-defined if you’re trying to make it a function from ℝ to ℝ. Even if you include a point at infinity, you still need to specify which expansion you’ll use for numbers with both a terminating and a non-terminating expansion. Every x whose decimal expansion is non-terminating will evaluate to infinity under your function. Specifically, all irrational numbers, as well as all rational numbers with least-terms denominator a multiple of any prime besides 2 and 5, have only a non-terminating expansion. Only terminating decimal expansions have finite values under your function.
x= sum from i=-infinity to infinity aix10i
f(x)=sum from i=-infinity to infinity rd(ai+ai-1)x10i, with rd(ai+ai-1) being equivalent to adding all the digits of (ai+ai-1)(for example, rd(10)=1, rd(11)=2, rd(1.32)=6, so on and so forth).
Qaanol wrote:You’re right, I did misread your f(rd) function. As it stands, it should be discontinuous at every number with a terminating decimal expansion.
HeWhoCouldn'tThinkOfAUsername wrote:Skeptical Scientist, thanks very much. I think this has become very clear now. So if I can find a way to make f(.999...)=f(1.000...) I can make this work. I'd be very interested if I could find a continuous function that is not a combination of previously known functions.
And I'm a little confused by your notation for an example of a continuous function working on a decimal expansion of x, particularly the %10 part, could you elaborate, maybe show me an example so I can see a little more clearly what you mean.
HeWhoCouldn'tThinkOfAUsername wrote:Oh, alright I see what you mean now, I guess I hadn't realized how rd(blah) was just blah+1 (mod 10).
So then, sum from -infinity to infinity ai+ai-1 (mod 10) is a continuous function, that should keep me busy. I'll play with that for a bit and see what if anything I find interesting with it, thank you for the help Qaanol and Skeptical Scientist. Cheers.
HeWhoCouldn'tThinkOfAUsername wrote:A quick question, in a function I created I found something interesting.
Let us say rd(x) is a function that maps x to all the values of the digits summed, then summed again, repeated until some one digit positive integer a( 0<or=a<10, with a being an integer value). If we do this for all the square numbers, zero excluded, we find that the list we generate is cyclical, in a pattern 1,4,9,7,7,9,4,1,9, at least up to the 19th square and I believe to infinity. Furthermore, if we apply this function for 2^n, starting at n=0, we get the pattern 1,2,4,8,7,5. This seems rather curious to me, and I was curious if anyone could see if there was a reason why these cyclical answers are coming out of this function, I'd be glad to know.
HeWhoCouldn'tThinkOfAUsername wrote:Now, this is a much more advanced question that I probably won't understand the answer to, but I am curious, was recently researching the Riemann Zeta Function, and I was curious about something. The Riemann Zeta Function can approximate any Holomorphic Function arbitrarily well. It is possible to construct a function such that any part of the function approximates a section of any holomorphic function(just restating Zeta Function Universality), but is it possible to construct a function such that any section of all holomorphic functions are approximated by some section of the function, and furthermore can we make it so that this function is Infinitely Differentiable(i.e. Holomorphic)? Can we identify this function knowing this property alone?
ameretrifle wrote:Magic space feudalism is therefore a viable idea.
tomtom2357 wrote:sinx(x) approaches zero as x approaches infinity, this is due to the fact that |sin(x)|<1 for all x, and |sin(x)|<|x| for x>0
Dason wrote:tomtom2357 wrote:sinx(x) approaches zero as x approaches infinity, this is due to the fact that |sin(x)|<1 for all x, and |sin(x)|<|x| for x>0
I don't think just having |f(x)| < 1 for all x and |f(x)| < |x| for x>0 alone implies that (f(x))^x goes to 0 as x goes to infinity. Or am I missing something? Let f(x) = (x-1)/x for x>1 and f(x) = x/2 for 0<x<=1. This satisfies the two requirements but the limit as x goes to infinity is 1/e.
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