asked 112k views
3 votes
Consider the error in using the approximation e−x≈1−x on the interval [−1,1]. (a) reasoning informally, on what interval is this approximation an overestimate? 1 an underestimate? (for each, give your answer as an interval or list of intervals,

e.g., to specify the intervals −0.25≤x<0.5 and 0.75

asked
User Bleyk
by
8.6k points

1 Answer

3 votes


e^(-x) \approx 1 - x

is a classic approximation, true for small x.

The next term in the polynomial expansion will be
+kx^2 where k is a positive number. So our estimate 1-x is definitely an underestimate on both sides of x=0.

Since for negative xs the exponential rises exponentially and the line only linearly, the exponential exceeds the line for all negative x. For positive x, the line quickly goes negative while the exponential is always positive.

So, there's no interval for which our approximation is an overestimate.

answered
User Nspessot
by
8.3k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.