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Mysterious connection
Hello again,
some time ago I noticed that there seems to be a strange connection between the standard normal distribution and 1/tanh(pi^2), as to be seen in A133658 in the OEIS: [URL]http://www.research.att.com/~njas/sequences/A133658[/URL] I wondered if any of you are able to tell me what's going on with these numbers. |
Is this even interesting? A coincidence? Or is it a trivial phenomenon?
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[quote=mart_r;160372]Is this even interesting? A coincidence? Or is it a trivial phenomenon?[/quote]
It's like that one where e^(pi*sqrt(163)) is nearly an integer. |
News
Had a look into this again today and found:
1/tanh(pi²) = 1 + 2*[e^(-2pi²)+e^(-4pi²)+e^(-6pi²)+e^(-8pi²)+...] (rather easy) A133658 __= 1 + 2*[e^(-2pi²)+e^(-8pi²)+e^(-18pi²)+e^(-32pi²)+e^(-50pi²)+...] (rather interesting) I would try to figure out why this is so, if only I could find an explanation of how the factor of 1/sqrt(2pi) in the standard normal distribution comes about... (Come think of it, this thread should probably be moved to Math or MiscMath) |
[quote=mart_r;193583]
I would try to figure out why this is so, if only I could find an explanation of how the factor of 1/sqrt(2pi) in the standard normal distribution comes about... [/quote] Are you familiar with the neat trick to find the area under the whole curve e^(-ax^2)? |
[quote=davieddy;193773]Are you familiar with the neat trick to find the area under the whole
curve e^(-ax^2)?[/quote] Nope. Not yet. |
Hint:
Find the volume under the surface e^-a(x^2 + y^2) Don't spoil the fun by googling:smile: |
Assuming a sphere (which I guess is the wrong way, right?),
e^(-3a(x²+y²)/2)/6pi^(3/2) (is there something like an instruction for use of the TEX-format?) |
[quote=davieddy;193777]Hint:
Find the volume under the surface e^-a(x^2 + y^2) Don't spoil the fun by googling:smile:[/quote] I am also frustrated by my inability to script maths as I do on paper. z = e^-a(x^2 + y^2) is the surface Find the the volume between it and the whole plane z=0. PS Pythagoras comes in handy. |
[url]http://www.mersenneforum.org/showthread.php?t=4576[/url]
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[quote=davieddy;193789]
z = e^-a(x^2 + y^2) is the surface Find the the volume between it and the whole plane z=0.[/quote] Okay, I admit that I lack some experience in this area of mathematics. (z is the surface? I thought it was the room coordinate?) Maybe I'd figure it out eventually, but not today. @ Mini-Geek: thanks! |
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