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Re: plotting even function
From: |
Geraint Paul Bevan |
Subject: |
Re: plotting even function |
Date: |
Sun, 20 Mar 2005 17:09:28 +0000 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla Thunderbird 0.5 (X11/20040306) |
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John B. Thoo wrote:
> Also, why is (x^(1/3))^2 not even? If f(x) = (x^(1/3))^2, then isn't
> f(-x) = ((-x)^(1/3))^2 = (- x^(1/3))^2 = (x^(1/3))^2 = f(x)
It is not true to say that (-x)^(1/3) is the same as -(x^(1/3)). That
is one possibility but there are two more. If n is an integer, x^n has
a unique value but x^(1/n) has n possible values i.e. the square root
x^(1/2) has two possible values, the cube root x^(1/3) has three
possible values, etc.
Consider that (-x)^(1/n) can be re-written as ((-1)*(+x))^(1/n) which
is ((-1)^(1/n))*((+x)^(1/n))
For symmetry about the y-axis, you therefore require that:
(-1)^(1/n) = -1.
However, for n=3, y=(-1)^(1/n) has three solutions:
y = -1
y = 0.5+i*sqrt(3)/2
y = 0.5-i*sqrt(3)/2
You obviously want to use the first of these solutions to get symmetry
about the y-axis but Octave doesn't know that unless you tell it.
- --
Geraint Bevan
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/geraint.bevan
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Re: plotting even function, Henry F. Mollet, 2005/03/19