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			3.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			120 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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								[section:zeta Riemann Zeta Function]
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								[h4 Synopsis]
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								``
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								#include <boost/math/special_functions/zeta.hpp>
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								``
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								   namespace boost{ namespace math{
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								   template <class T>
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								   ``__sf_result`` zeta(T z);
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								   template <class T, class ``__Policy``>
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								   ``__sf_result`` zeta(T z, const ``__Policy``&);
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								   }} // namespaces
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								The return type of these functions is computed using the __arg_promotion_rules:
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								the return type is `double` if T is an integer type, and T otherwise.
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								[optional_policy]
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								[h4 Description]
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								   template <class T>
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								   ``__sf_result`` zeta(T z);
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								   template <class T, class ``__Policy``>
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								   ``__sf_result`` zeta(T z, const ``__Policy``&);
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								Returns the [@http://mathworld.wolfram.com/RiemannZetaFunction.html zeta function]
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								of z:
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								[equation zeta1]
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								[graph zeta1]
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								[graph zeta2]
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								[h4 Accuracy]
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								The following table shows the peak errors (in units of epsilon) 
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								found on various platforms with various floating point types, 
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								along with comparisons to the __gsl and __cephes libraries.
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								Unless otherwise specified any floating point type that is narrower
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								than the one shown will have __zero_error.
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								[table_zeta]
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								[h4 Testing]
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								The tests for these functions come in two parts:
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								basic sanity checks use spot values calculated using
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								[@http://functions.wolfram.com/webMathematica/FunctionEvaluation.jsp?name=Zeta Mathworld's online evaluator],
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								while accuracy checks use high-precision test values calculated at 1000-bit precision with
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								[@http://shoup.net/ntl/doc/RR.txt NTL::RR] and this implementation. 
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								Note that the generic and type-specific
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								versions of these functions use differing implementations internally, so this
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								gives us reasonably independent test data.  Using our test data to test other
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								"known good" implementations also provides an additional sanity check. 
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								[h4 Implementation]
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								All versions of these functions first use the usual reflection formulas
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								to make their arguments positive:
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								[equation zeta3]
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								The generic versions of these functions are implemented using the series:
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								[equation zeta6]
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								When the significand (mantissa) size is recognised
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								(currently for 53, 64 and 113-bit reals, plus single-precision 24-bit handled via promotion to double)
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								then a series of rational approximations [jm_rationals] are used.
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								For 0 < z < 1 the approximating form is:
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								[equation zeta4]
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								For a rational approximation R(1-z) and a constant C.
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								For 1 < z < 4 the approximating form is:
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								[equation zeta5]
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								For a rational approximation R(n-z) and a constant C and integer n.
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								For z > 4 the approximating form is:
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								[zeta](z) = 1 + e[super R(z - n)]
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								For a rational approximation R(z-n) and integer n, note that the accuracy 
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								required for R(z-n) is not full machine precision, but an absolute error
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								of: [epsilon]/R(0).  This saves us quite a few digits when dealing with large 
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								z, especially when [epsilon] is small.
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								Finally, there are some special cases for integer arguments, there are
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								closed forms for negative or even integers:
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								[equation zeta7]
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								[equation zeta8]
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								[equation zeta9]
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								and for positive odd integers we simply cache pre-computed values as these are of great
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								benefit to some infinite series calculations.
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								[endsect]
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								[/ :error_function The Error Functions]
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								[/ 
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								  Copyright 2006 John Maddock and Paul A. Bristow.
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								  Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
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								  (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
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								  http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt).
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								]
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