Besides of computational aspects what's the difference between a Taylor series around a point $\alpha$ and a Taylor series around a point $\beta$?
What's the difference between Taylor series around different points?
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0I meant how hard (by hand) is to get numerical values depending on its Taylor series expansion around distinct points. – 2011-06-06
2 Answers
The series may have different radii of convergence, for example. I assume you start with a reasonably nice function $f$. Suppose $f$ has a pole, I mean, you are "dividing by 0" somewhere, say, at $x=a$. If nothing else happens, then the radius of convergence at $\alpha$ cannot be larger than the distance from $a$ to $\alpha$, but it could be precisely this distance. Same with $\beta$.
To be specific, take $f(x)=1/(1-x)$. The series at 0 is $\displaystyle \sum_n x^n$ which converges for $|x|<1$. The series at $-1$ is $\displaystyle \sum_n \frac1{2^{n+1}} (x+1)^n$; it converges for $|x+1|<2$.
This explains why even in the case of reasonably well behaved functions we may want to compute the Taylor series at different points depending of the region we are interested in studying.
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1Say you want to study the $f$ from the example in a neighborhood of -1.5 using Taylor series. Even though the series at 0 is very well-behaved, you cannot use it for this task. Instead, you need to pick a point for which the series will converge in a neighborhood of -1.5 (for example, -1). In complex analysis this is an important issue. Analytic functions are *locally* given by power series, but typically there is not a power series that gives us the function over its whole domain. – 2011-06-06
Suppose $f(z)=\sum_n a_n(z-z_0)^n$ on some open subset $S$ within the disc of convergence $B(z_0,\rho)$ (we could take the expansion to be valid on the whole disc too). Then given another $w \in S \subseteq B(z_0,\rho)$, we can find a $B(w,\delta) \subseteq S \subseteq B(z_0,\rho)$ such that $f$ can be expanded as a power series with $w$ as a center. i.e
$f(z)=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\hat{a}_n(z-w)^n$ valid on $B(w,\delta)$ Where $\hat{a}_n=\sum_{i=n}^{\infty}\binom{i}{n} a_i(w-z_0)^{n-i}$
[One use this to show that the derivative of $f$ at a point $w$ inside the disc of convergence is just the first coefficient of the expansion around that point.]