Intermediate Physics for Medicine and Biology: Extrema of the Sinc Function
In
Intermediate Physics for Medicine and Biology,
Russ Hobbie and I write
The function sin(x)/x has its maximum value of 1 at x = 0. It is also called the sinc(x) function.
Sinc(
x) oscillates like sin(
x), but its amplitude decays as 1/
x. If sin(
x) is zero then sinc(
x) is also zero, except for the special point
x = 0, where 0/0 becomes 1.
|
A plot of the sinc function. |
|
Trigonometric Delights, by Eli Maor |
In
IPMB, Russ and I don
’t evaluate the values of
x corresponding to local maximum and minimum values of sinc(
x).
Eli Maor examines the peak values of
f(
x) = sinc(
x) in his book
Trigonometric Delights. He writes
We now wish to locate the extreme points of f(x)—the points where it assumes its maximum or minimum values. And here a surprise is awaiting us. We know that the extreme points of g(x) = sinx occur at all odd multiples of π/2, that is, at x = (2n+1)π/2. So we might expect the same to be true for the extreme points of f(x) = (sinx)/x. This, however, is not the case. To find the extreme point, we differentiate f(x) using the quotient rule and equate the result to zero:
f’(x) = (x cosx – sinx)/x2 = 0. (1)
Now if a ratio is equal to zero, then the numerator itself must equal to zero, so we have x cosx – sinx = 0, from which we get
tan x = x. (2)
Equation (2) cannot be solved by a closed formula in the same manner as, say, a quadratic equation can; it is a transcendental equation whose roots can be found graphically as the points of intersection of the graphs of y = x and y = tan x.
|
A plot of y=tanx versus x and y=x versus x. |
The extreme values are at
x = 0, 4.49 = 1.43π, 7.73 = 2.46π, etc. As
x becomes large, the roots approach (2
n+1)π/2.
Eli Maor is a rare breed: a writer of mathematics. Russ and I cite his wonderful book
e, The Story of a Number in Chapter 2 of
IPMB. I also enjoyed
The Pythagorean Theorem: A 4,000-year History. Maor has written many books about math and science. His most recent came out in May:
Music by the Numbers--From Pythagoras to Schoenberg. I put it on my summer reading list.
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