The legendre function, The pcoef function, The proot function – HP 49g+ User Manual

Page 189: The ptayl function

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The LEGENDRE function
A Legendre polynomial of order n is a polynomial function that solves the

differential equation

0

)

1

(

2

)

1

(

2

2

2

=

+

+

y

n

n

dx

dy

x

dx

y

d

x

To obtain the

n-th order Legendre polynomial, use LEGENDRE(n), e.g.,

LEGENDRE(3) = ‘(5*X^3-3*X)/2’

LEGENDRE(5) = ‘(63*X ^5-70*X^3+15*X)/8’


The PCOEF function
Given an array containing the roots of a polynomial, the function PCOEF
generates an array containing the coefficients of the corresponding
polynomial. The coefficients correspond to decreasing order of the
independent variable. For example: PCOEF([-2,–1,0,1,1,2]) = [1. –1. –5. 5.
4. –4. 0.], which represents the polynomial X

6

-X

5

-5X

4

+5X

3

+4X

2

-4X.


The PROOT function
Given an array containing the coefficients of a polynomial, in decreasing
order, the function PROOT provides the roots of the polynomial. Example,
from X

2

+5X-6 =0, PROOT([1, –5, 6]) = [2. 3.].


The PTAYL function
Given a polynomial P(X) and a number

a, the function PTAYL is used to obtain

an expression Q(X-

a) = P(X), i.e., to develop a polynomial in powers of (X- a).

This is also known as a Taylor polynomial, from which the name of the
function, Polynomial & TAYLor, follow:

For example, PTAYL(‘X^3-2*X+2’,2) = ‘X^3+6*X^2+10*X+6’.

In actuality, you should interpret this result to mean
‘(X-2) ^3+6*(X-2) ^2+10*(X-2) +6’.

Let’s check by using the substitution: ‘X = x – 2’. We recover the original
polynomial, but in terms of lower-case x rather than upper-case x.

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