Calculating the Value of e
There are several ways to calculate the value of e. Let's look at the historical development.
Using a Binomial Expansion
If
n is very large (approaches infinity) the value of
approaches e.
The largest that Scientific Notebook can handle is about n = 100,000 and this is only correct to the 4th decimal place.
Another Expansion
As n becomes very small,
approaches the value of e.
We can obtain reasonable accuracy with a very small value of n.
The graph of y = (1 + x)1/x
is as follows:

(There is actually a "hole" at x = 0. Can you understand why?)
Newton's Series Expansion for e
The
series expansion for e
is
Replacing x with 1, we have:
We can write this as:
This series converges to give us the answer correct to 9 decimal places using 12 steps:
Brother's Formulae
Recently, new formulae have been developed by Brothers (2004) which make the calculation of e very efficient.
We only need 6 steps for 9 decimal place accuracy:
Graphical Demonstration of e
The area under the curve
between 1 and e
is equal to 1
unit2.
Reference:
Brothers, H.J. 2004. Improving the convergence of Newton's series approximation for e. College Mathematics Journal 35(January):34-39. Available at http://www.brotherstechnology.com/docs/icnsae_(cmj0104-300dpi).pdf.
Back to
Logarithms with Base e.
Didn't find what you are looking for on this page? Try search:
The IntMath Newsletter
Sign up for the free IntMath Newsletter. Get math study tips, information, news and updates each fortnight. Join thousands of satisfied students, teachers and parents!
Want Improved Memory?
Get a Memory... Be Phenomenal!
Book mark this page
Add this page to Del.icio.us, Furl, Digg, StumbleUpon, Google, whatever...
Need a break? Play a math game. Well, they all involve math... No, really!




