Bernstein's constant, usually denoted by the Greek letter β (beta), is a mathematical constant named after Sergei Natanovich Bernstein and is equal to 0.2801694990... .[1]

Definition

Let En(ƒ) be the error of the best uniform approximation to a real function ƒ(x) on the interval [1, 1] by real polynomials of no more than degree n. In the case of ƒ(x) = |x|, Bernstein[2] showed that the limit

called Bernstein's constant, exists and is between 0.278 and 0.286. His conjecture that the limit is:

was disproven by Varga and Carpenter,[3] who calculated

References

  1. (sequence A073001 in the OEIS)
  2. Bernstein, S.N. (1914). "Sur la meilleure approximation de x par des polynomes de degrés donnés". Acta Math. 37: 1–57. doi:10.1007/BF02401828.
  3. Varga, Richard S.; Carpenter, Amos J. (1987). "A conjecture of S. Bernstein in approximation theory". Math. USSR Sbornik. 57 (2): 547–560. Bibcode:1987SbMat..57..547V. doi:10.1070/SM1987v057n02ABEH003086. MR 0842399.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.