Accelerable subsets of logarithmic sequences (Q758080): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 15:05, 21 June 2024

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Accelerable subsets of logarithmic sequences
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    Accelerable subsets of logarithmic sequences (English)
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    1990
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    A set \({\mathcal S}\) of convergent sequences is said to be accelerable if there is a sequence transformation T such that \(\lim_{n\to \infty}(T_ n-S)/(S_ n-S)=0\text{ for any} (S_ n)\in {\mathcal S},\) where S is the limit of \((S_ n)\) and \((T_ n)=T(S_ n)\). A real sequence \((S_ n)\) converging to S is said to be a logarithmic sequence if \(\lim_{n\to \infty}(S_{n+1}-S)/(S_ n-S)=1.\) We denote by LOG the set of all logarithmic sequences. We denote by LOGSF the set of all logarithmic sequences satisfying \(\lim_{n\to \infty}\Delta S_{n+1}/\Delta S_ n=1,\) where \(\Delta S_ n=S_{n+1}-S_ n.\) The aim of this paper is to study what the accelerable subsets of LOGSF of all logarithmically convergent sequences are. Three kinds of subsets of LOGSF and sequence transformations as well as numerical examples are given.
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    convergence acceleration
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    extrapolation
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    sequence transformation
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    logarithmic sequence
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    logarithmically convergent sequences
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    numerical examples
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