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Asymptotic analysis

In mathematical analysis, asymptotic analysis, also known as asymptotics, is a method of describing limiting behavior.

As an illustration, suppose that we are interested in the properties of a function f (n) as n becomes very large. If f(n) = n2 + 3n, then as n becomes very large, the term 3n becomes insignificant compared to n2. The function f(n) is said to be "asymptotically equivalent to n2, as n → ∞". This is often written symbolically as f (n) ~ n2, which is read as "f(n) is asymptotic to n2".

An example of an important asymptotic result is the prime number theorem. Let π(x) denote the prime-counting function (which is not directly related to the constant pi), i.e. π(x) is the number of prime numbers that are less than or equal to x. Then the theorem states that

Asymptotic analysis is commonly used in computer science as part of the analysis of algorithms and is often expressed there in terms of big O notation.

Definition edit

Formally, given functions f (x) and g(x), we define a binary relation

 
if and only if (de Bruijn 1981, §1.4)
 

The symbol ~ is the tilde. The relation is an equivalence relation on the set of functions of x; the functions f and g are said to be asymptotically equivalent. The domain of f and g can be any set for which the limit is defined: e.g. real numbers, complex numbers, positive integers.

The same notation is also used for other ways of passing to a limit: e.g. x → 0, x ↓ 0, |x| → 0. The way of passing to the limit is often not stated explicitly, if it is clear from the context.

Although the above definition is common in the literature, it is problematic if g(x) is zero infinitely often as x goes to the limiting value. For that reason, some authors use an alternative definition. The alternative definition, in little-o notation, is that f ~ g if and only if

 

This definition is equivalent to the prior definition if g(x) is not zero in some neighbourhood of the limiting value.[1][2]

Properties edit

If   and  , then, under some mild conditions,[further explanation needed] the following hold:

  •  , for every real r
  •   if  
  •  
  •  

Such properties allow asymptotically-equivalent functions to be freely exchanged in many algebraic expressions.

Examples of asymptotic formulas edit

  • Factorial
     
    —this is Stirling's approximation
  • Partition function
    For a positive integer n, the partition function, p(n), gives the number of ways of writing the integer n as a sum of positive integers, where the order of addends is not considered.
     
  • Airy function
    The Airy function, Ai(x), is a solution of the differential equation y″xy = 0; it has many applications in physics.
     
  • Hankel functions
     

Asymptotic expansion edit

An asymptotic expansion of a function f(x) is in practice an expression of that function in terms of a series, the partial sums of which do not necessarily converge, but such that taking any initial partial sum provides an asymptotic formula for f. The idea is that successive terms provide an increasingly accurate description of the order of growth of f.

In symbols, it means we have   but also   and   for each fixed k. In view of the definition of the   symbol, the last equation means   in the little o notation, i.e.,   is much smaller than  

The relation   takes its full meaning if   for all k, which means the   form an asymptotic scale. In that case, some authors may abusively write   to denote the statement   One should however be careful that this is not a standard use of the   symbol, and that it does not correspond to the definition given in § Definition.

In the present situation, this relation   actually follows from combining steps k and k−1; by subtracting   from   one gets   i.e.  

In case the asymptotic expansion does not converge, for any particular value of the argument there will be a particular partial sum which provides the best approximation and adding additional terms will decrease the accuracy. This optimal partial sum will usually have more terms as the argument approaches the limit value.

Examples of asymptotic expansions edit

  • Gamma function
     
  • Exponential integral
     
  • Error function
     
    where m!! is the double factorial.

Worked example edit

Asymptotic expansions often occur when an ordinary series is used in a formal expression that forces the taking of values outside of its domain of convergence. For example, we might start with the ordinary series

 

The expression on the left is valid on the entire complex plane  , while the right hand side converges only for  . Multiplying by   and integrating both sides yields

 

The integral on the left hand side can be expressed in terms of the exponential integral. The integral on the right hand side, after the substitution  , may be recognized as the gamma function. Evaluating both, one obtains the asymptotic expansion

 

Here, the right hand side is clearly not convergent for any non-zero value of t. However, by keeping t small, and truncating the series on the right to a finite number of terms, one may obtain a fairly good approximation to the value of  . Substituting   and noting that   results in the asymptotic expansion given earlier in this article.

Asymptotic distribution edit

In mathematical statistics, an asymptotic distribution is a hypothetical distribution that is in a sense the "limiting" distribution of a sequence of distributions. A distribution is an ordered set of random variables Zi for i = 1, …, n, for some positive integer n. An asymptotic distribution allows i to range without bound, that is, n is infinite.

A special case of an asymptotic distribution is when the late entries go to zero—that is, the Zi go to 0 as i goes to infinity. Some instances of "asymptotic distribution" refer only to this special case.

This is based on the notion of an asymptotic function which cleanly approaches a constant value (the asymptote) as the independent variable goes to infinity; "clean" in this sense meaning that for any desired closeness epsilon there is some value of the independent variable after which the function never differs from the constant by more than epsilon.

An asymptote is a straight line that a curve approaches but never meets or crosses. Informally, one may speak of the curve meeting the asymptote "at infinity" although this is not a precise definition. In the equation   y becomes arbitrarily small in magnitude as x increases.

Applications edit

Asymptotic analysis is used in several mathematical sciences. In statistics, asymptotic theory provides limiting approximations of the probability distribution of sample statistics, such as the likelihood ratio statistic and the expected value of the deviance. Asymptotic theory does not provide a method of evaluating the finite-sample distributions of sample statistics, however. Non-asymptotic bounds are provided by methods of approximation theory.

Examples of applications are the following.

Asymptotic analysis is a key tool for exploring the ordinary and partial differential equations which arise in the mathematical modelling of real-world phenomena.[3] An illustrative example is the derivation of the boundary layer equations from the full Navier-Stokes equations governing fluid flow. In many cases, the asymptotic expansion is in power of a small parameter, ε: in the boundary layer case, this is the nondimensional ratio of the boundary layer thickness to a typical length scale of the problem. Indeed, applications of asymptotic analysis in mathematical modelling often[3] center around a nondimensional parameter which has been shown, or assumed, to be small through a consideration of the scales of the problem at hand.

Asymptotic expansions typically arise in the approximation of certain integrals (Laplace's method, saddle-point method, method of steepest descent) or in the approximation of probability distributions (Edgeworth series). The Feynman graphs in quantum field theory are another example of asymptotic expansions which often do not converge.

Asymptotic versus Numerical Analysis edit

Debruijn illustrates the use of asymptotics in the following dialog between Miss N.A., a Numerical Analyst, and Dr. A.A., an Asymptotic Analyst:

N.A.: I want to evaluate my function   for large values of  , with a relative error of at most 1%.

A.A.:  .

N.A.: I am sorry, I don't understand.

A.A.:  

N.A.: But my value of   is only 100.

A.A.: Why did you not say so? My evaluations give

 

N.A.: This is no news to me. I know already that  .

A.A.: I can gain a little on some of my estimates. Now I find that

 

N.A.: I asked for 1%, not for 20%.

A.A.: It is almost the best thing I possibly can get. Why don't you take larger values of  ?

N.A.: !!! I think it's better to ask my electronic computing machine.

Machine: f(100) = 0.01137 42259 34008 67153

A.A.: Haven't I told you so? My estimate of 20% was not far off from the 14% of the real error.

N.A.: !!! . . .  !

Some days later, Miss N.A. wants to know the value of f(1000), but her machine would take a month of computation to give the answer. She returns to her Asymptotic Colleague, and gets a fully satisfactory reply.[4]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Asymptotic equality", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
  2. ^ Estrada & Kanwal (2002, §1.2)
  3. ^ a b Howison, S. (2005), Practical Applied Mathematics, Cambridge University Press
  4. ^ Bruijn, Nicolaas Govert de (1981). Asymptotic methods in analysis. Dover books on advanced mathematics. New York: Dover publ. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-486-64221-5.

References edit

External links edit

  • Asymptotic Analysis  —home page of the journal, which is published by IOS Press

asymptotic, analysis, this, article, about, behavior, functions, inputs, approach, infinity, some, other, limit, value, asymptotes, geometry, asymptote, mathematical, analysis, asymptotic, analysis, also, known, asymptotics, method, describing, limiting, behav. This article is about the behavior of functions as inputs approach infinity or some other limit value For asymptotes in geometry see Asymptote In mathematical analysis asymptotic analysis also known as asymptotics is a method of describing limiting behavior As an illustration suppose that we are interested in the properties of a function f n as n becomes very large If f n n2 3n then as n becomes very large the term 3n becomes insignificant compared to n2 The function f n is said to be asymptotically equivalent to n2 as n This is often written symbolically as f n n2 which is read as f n is asymptotic to n2 An example of an important asymptotic result is the prime number theorem Let p x denote the prime counting function which is not directly related to the constant pi i e p x is the number of prime numbers that are less than or equal to x Then the theorem states thatp x xln x displaystyle pi x sim frac x ln x Asymptotic analysis is commonly used in computer science as part of the analysis of algorithms and is often expressed there in terms of big O notation Contents 1 Definition 2 Properties 3 Examples of asymptotic formulas 4 Asymptotic expansion 4 1 Examples of asymptotic expansions 4 2 Worked example 5 Asymptotic distribution 6 Applications 6 1 Asymptotic versus Numerical Analysis 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksDefinition editFormally given functions f x and g x we define a binary relationf x g x as x displaystyle f x sim g x quad text as x to infty nbsp if and only if de Bruijn 1981 1 4 limx f x g x 1 displaystyle lim x to infty frac f x g x 1 nbsp The symbol is the tilde The relation is an equivalence relation on the set of functions of x the functions f and g are said to be asymptotically equivalent The domain of f and g can be any set for which the limit is defined e g real numbers complex numbers positive integers The same notation is also used for other ways of passing to a limit e g x 0 x 0 x 0 The way of passing to the limit is often not stated explicitly if it is clear from the context Although the above definition is common in the literature it is problematic if g x is zero infinitely often as x goes to the limiting value For that reason some authors use an alternative definition The alternative definition in little o notation is that f g if and only iff x g x 1 o 1 displaystyle f x g x 1 o 1 nbsp This definition is equivalent to the prior definition if g x is not zero in some neighbourhood of the limiting value 1 2 Properties editIf f g displaystyle f sim g nbsp and a b displaystyle a sim b nbsp then under some mild conditions further explanation needed the following hold fr gr displaystyle f r sim g r nbsp for every real r log f log g displaystyle log f sim log g nbsp if limg 1 displaystyle lim g neq 1 nbsp f a g b displaystyle f times a sim g times b nbsp f a g b displaystyle f a sim g b nbsp Such properties allow asymptotically equivalent functions to be freely exchanged in many algebraic expressions Examples of asymptotic formulas editFactorial n 2pn ne n displaystyle n sim sqrt 2 pi n left frac n e right n nbsp this is Stirling s approximation Partition function For a positive integer n the partition function p n gives the number of ways of writing the integer n as a sum of positive integers where the order of addends is not considered p n 14n3ep2n3 displaystyle p n sim frac 1 4n sqrt 3 e pi sqrt frac 2n 3 nbsp Airy function The Airy function Ai x is a solution of the differential equation y xy 0 it has many applications in physics Ai x e 23x322px1 4 displaystyle operatorname Ai x sim frac e frac 2 3 x frac 3 2 2 sqrt pi x 1 4 nbsp Hankel functions Ha 1 z 2pzei z 2pa p4 Ha 2 z 2pze i z 2pa p4 displaystyle begin aligned H alpha 1 z amp sim sqrt frac 2 pi z e i left z frac 2 pi alpha pi 4 right H alpha 2 z amp sim sqrt frac 2 pi z e i left z frac 2 pi alpha pi 4 right end aligned nbsp Asymptotic expansion editMain article Asymptotic expansion An asymptotic expansion of a function f x is in practice an expression of that function in terms of a series the partial sums of which do not necessarily converge but such that taking any initial partial sum provides an asymptotic formula for f The idea is that successive terms provide an increasingly accurate description of the order of growth of f In symbols it means we have f g1 displaystyle f sim g 1 nbsp but also f g1 g2 displaystyle f g 1 sim g 2 nbsp and f g1 gk 1 gk displaystyle f g 1 cdots g k 1 sim g k nbsp for each fixed k In view of the definition of the displaystyle sim nbsp symbol the last equation means f g1 gk o gk displaystyle f g 1 cdots g k o g k nbsp in the little o notation i e f g1 gk displaystyle f g 1 cdots g k nbsp is much smaller than gk displaystyle g k nbsp The relation f g1 gk 1 gk displaystyle f g 1 cdots g k 1 sim g k nbsp takes its full meaning if gk 1 o gk displaystyle g k 1 o g k nbsp for all k which means the gk displaystyle g k nbsp form an asymptotic scale In that case some authors may abusively write f g1 gk displaystyle f sim g 1 cdots g k nbsp to denote the statement f g1 gk o gk displaystyle f g 1 cdots g k o g k nbsp One should however be careful that this is not a standard use of the displaystyle sim nbsp symbol and that it does not correspond to the definition given in Definition In the present situation this relation gk o gk 1 displaystyle g k o g k 1 nbsp actually follows from combining steps k and k 1 by subtracting f g1 gk 2 gk 1 o gk 1 displaystyle f g 1 cdots g k 2 g k 1 o g k 1 nbsp from f g1 gk 2 gk 1 gk o gk displaystyle f g 1 cdots g k 2 g k 1 g k o g k nbsp one gets gk o gk o gk 1 displaystyle g k o g k o g k 1 nbsp i e gk o gk 1 displaystyle g k o g k 1 nbsp In case the asymptotic expansion does not converge for any particular value of the argument there will be a particular partial sum which provides the best approximation and adding additional terms will decrease the accuracy This optimal partial sum will usually have more terms as the argument approaches the limit value Examples of asymptotic expansions edit Gamma function exxx2pxG x 1 1 112x 1288x2 13951840x3 x displaystyle frac e x x x sqrt 2 pi x Gamma x 1 sim 1 frac 1 12x frac 1 288x 2 frac 139 51840x 3 cdots x to infty nbsp Exponential integral xexE1 x n 0 1 nn xn x displaystyle xe x E 1 x sim sum n 0 infty frac 1 n n x n x to infty nbsp Error function pxex2erfc x 1 n 1 1 n 2n 1 n 2x2 n x displaystyle sqrt pi xe x 2 operatorname erfc x sim 1 sum n 1 infty 1 n frac 2n 1 n 2x 2 n x to infty nbsp where m is the double factorial Worked example edit Asymptotic expansions often occur when an ordinary series is used in a formal expression that forces the taking of values outside of its domain of convergence For example we might start with the ordinary series11 w n 0 wn displaystyle frac 1 1 w sum n 0 infty w n nbsp The expression on the left is valid on the entire complex plane w 1 displaystyle w neq 1 nbsp while the right hand side converges only for w lt 1 displaystyle w lt 1 nbsp Multiplying by e w t displaystyle e w t nbsp and integrating both sides yields 0 e wt1 wdw n 0 tn 1 0 e uundu displaystyle int 0 infty frac e frac w t 1 w dw sum n 0 infty t n 1 int 0 infty e u u n du nbsp The integral on the left hand side can be expressed in terms of the exponential integral The integral on the right hand side after the substitution u w t displaystyle u w t nbsp may be recognized as the gamma function Evaluating both one obtains the asymptotic expansione 1tEi 1t n 0 n tn 1 displaystyle e frac 1 t operatorname Ei left frac 1 t right sum n 0 infty n t n 1 nbsp Here the right hand side is clearly not convergent for any non zero value of t However by keeping t small and truncating the series on the right to a finite number of terms one may obtain a fairly good approximation to the value of Ei 1 t displaystyle operatorname Ei 1 t nbsp Substituting x 1 t displaystyle x 1 t nbsp and noting that Ei x E1 x displaystyle operatorname Ei x E 1 x nbsp results in the asymptotic expansion given earlier in this article Asymptotic distribution editMain article Asymptotic distribution In mathematical statistics an asymptotic distribution is a hypothetical distribution that is in a sense the limiting distribution of a sequence of distributions A distribution is an ordered set of random variables Zi for i 1 n for some positive integer n An asymptotic distribution allows i to range without bound that is n is infinite A special case of an asymptotic distribution is when the late entries go to zero that is the Zi go to 0 as i goes to infinity Some instances of asymptotic distribution refer only to this special case This is based on the notion of an asymptotic function which cleanly approaches a constant value the asymptote as the independent variable goes to infinity clean in this sense meaning that for any desired closeness epsilon there is some value of the independent variable after which the function never differs from the constant by more than epsilon An asymptote is a straight line that a curve approaches but never meets or crosses Informally one may speak of the curve meeting the asymptote at infinity although this is not a precise definition In the equation y 1x displaystyle y frac 1 x nbsp y becomes arbitrarily small in magnitude as x increases Applications editAsymptotic analysis is used in several mathematical sciences In statistics asymptotic theory provides limiting approximations of the probability distribution of sample statistics such as the likelihood ratio statistic and the expected value of the deviance Asymptotic theory does not provide a method of evaluating the finite sample distributions of sample statistics however Non asymptotic bounds are provided by methods of approximation theory Examples of applications are the following In applied mathematics asymptotic analysis is used to build numerical methods to approximate equation solutions In mathematical statistics and probability theory asymptotics are used in analysis of long run or large sample behaviour of random variables and estimators In computer science in the analysis of algorithms considering the performance of algorithms The behavior of physical systems an example being statistical mechanics In accident analysis when identifying the causation of crash through count modeling with large number of crash counts in a given time and space Asymptotic analysis is a key tool for exploring the ordinary and partial differential equations which arise in the mathematical modelling of real world phenomena 3 An illustrative example is the derivation of the boundary layer equations from the full Navier Stokes equations governing fluid flow In many cases the asymptotic expansion is in power of a small parameter e in the boundary layer case this is the nondimensional ratio of the boundary layer thickness to a typical length scale of the problem Indeed applications of asymptotic analysis in mathematical modelling often 3 center around a nondimensional parameter which has been shown or assumed to be small through a consideration of the scales of the problem at hand Asymptotic expansions typically arise in the approximation of certain integrals Laplace s method saddle point method method of steepest descent or in the approximation of probability distributions Edgeworth series The Feynman graphs in quantum field theory are another example of asymptotic expansions which often do not converge Asymptotic versus Numerical Analysis edit Debruijn illustrates the use of asymptotics in the following dialog between Miss N A a Numerical Analyst and Dr A A an Asymptotic Analyst N A I want to evaluate my function f x displaystyle f x nbsp for large values of x displaystyle x nbsp with a relative error of at most 1 A A f x x 1 O x 2 x displaystyle f x x 1 mathrm O x 2 qquad x to infty nbsp N A I am sorry I don t understand A A f x x 1 lt 8x 2 x gt 104 displaystyle f x x 1 lt 8x 2 qquad x gt 10 4 nbsp N A But my value of x displaystyle x nbsp is only 100 A A Why did you not say so My evaluations give f x x 1 lt 57000x 2 x gt 100 displaystyle f x x 1 lt 57000x 2 qquad x gt 100 nbsp N A This is no news to me I know already that 0 lt f 100 lt 1 displaystyle 0 lt f 100 lt 1 nbsp A A I can gain a little on some of my estimates Now I find that f x x 1 lt 20x 2 x gt 100 displaystyle f x x 1 lt 20x 2 qquad x gt 100 nbsp N A I asked for 1 not for 20 A A It is almost the best thing I possibly can get Why don t you take larger values of x displaystyle x nbsp N A I think it s better to ask my electronic computing machine Machine f 100 0 01137 42259 34008 67153A A Haven t I told you so My estimate of 20 was not far off from the 14 of the real error N A Some days later Miss N A wants to know the value of f 1000 but her machine would take a month of computation to give the answer She returns to her Asymptotic Colleague and gets a fully satisfactory reply 4 See also editAsymptote Limit of the tangent line at a point that tends to infinity Asymptotic computational complexity in theory of computationPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Asymptotic density Concept in number theoryPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Asymptotic theory statistics Study of convergence properties of statistical estimators Asymptotology Dealing with applied mathematical systems in limiting cases Big O notation Describes limiting behavior of a function Leading order term Terms in a mathematical expression with the largest order of magnitude Method of dominant balance Method to determine the asymptotic behavior of solutions to ODEs without fully solving the equation Method of matched asymptotic expansions Watson s lemma lemma on the asymptotic behavior of integralsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallbackNotes edit Asymptotic equality Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Estrada amp Kanwal 2002 1 2 a b Howison S 2005 Practical Applied Mathematics Cambridge University Press Bruijn Nicolaas Govert de 1981 Asymptotic methods in analysis Dover books on advanced mathematics New York Dover publ p 19 ISBN 978 0 486 64221 5 References editBalser W 1994 From Divergent Power Series To Analytic Functions Springer Verlag ISBN 9783540485940 de Bruijn N G 1981 Asymptotic Methods in Analysis Dover Publications ISBN 9780486642215 Estrada R Kanwal R P 2002 A Distributional Approach to Asymptotics Birkhauser ISBN 9780817681302 Miller P D 2006 Applied Asymptotic Analysis American Mathematical Society ISBN 9780821840788 Murray J D 1984 Asymptotic Analysis Springer ISBN 9781461211228 Paris R B Kaminsky D 2001 Asymptotics and Mellin Barnes Integrals Cambridge University PressExternal links editAsymptotic Analysis home page of the journal which is published by IOS Press A paper on time series analysis using asymptotic distribution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asymptotic analysis amp oldid 1210654678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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