In mathematics, the Mercator series or Newton–Mercator series is the Taylor series for the natural logarithm:

Polynomial approximation to logarithm with n=1, 2, 3, and 10 in the interval (0,2).

In summation notation,

The series converges to the natural logarithm (shifted by 1) whenever .

History edit

The series was discovered independently by Johannes Hudde[1] and Isaac Newton. It was first published by Nicholas Mercator, in his 1668 treatise Logarithmotechnia.

Derivation edit

The series can be obtained from Taylor's theorem, by inductively computing the nth derivative of   at   , starting with

 

Alternatively, one can start with the finite geometric series ( )

 

which gives

 

It follows that

 

and by termwise integration,

 

If   , the remainder term tends to 0 as  .

This expression may be integrated iteratively k more times to yield

 

where

 

and

 

are polynomials in x.[2]

Special cases edit

Setting   in the Mercator series yields the alternating harmonic series

 

Complex series edit

The complex power series

 

is the Taylor series for   , where log denotes the principal branch of the complex logarithm. This series converges precisely for all complex number  . In fact, as seen by the ratio test, it has radius of convergence equal to 1, therefore converges absolutely on every disk B(0, r) with radius r < 1. Moreover, it converges uniformly on every nibbled disk  , with δ > 0. This follows at once from the algebraic identity:

 

observing that the right-hand side is uniformly convergent on the whole closed unit disk.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Vermij, Rienk (3 February 2012). "Bijdrage tot de bio-bibliografie van Johannes Hudde". GEWINA / TGGNWT (in Dutch). 18 (1): 25–35. ISSN 0928-303X.
  2. ^ Medina, Luis A.; Moll, Victor H.; Rowland, Eric S. (2011). "Iterated primitives of logarithmic powers". International Journal of Number Theory. 7 (3): 623–634. arXiv:0911.1325. doi:10.1142/S179304211100423X. S2CID 115164019.