The arithmetic-geometric mean of two numbers
and
(often also written
or
) is defined by starting with
and
, then iterating
until
to the desired precision.
and
converge towards each other since
But ,
so
|
(5) |
Now, add
to each side
|
(6) |
so
|
(7) |
|
|
|
The top plots show for
and
for
, while the bottom two plots show
for complex values of
.
The AGM is very useful in computing the values of complete elliptic integrals and can also be used for finding the inverse tangent.
It is implemented in the Wolfram Language as ArithmeticGeometricMean[a, b].
can be expressed in closed form in terms of the complete
elliptic integral of the first kind
as
|
(8) |
The definition of the arithmetic-geometric mean also holds in the complex plane, as illustrated above for .
The Legendre form of the arithmetic-geometric mean is given by
|
(9) |
where
and
|
(10) |
Special values of are summarized in the following table. The special
value
|
(11) |
(OEIS A014549) is called Gauss's constant. It has the closed form
where the above integral is the lemniscate function and the equality of the arithmetic-geometric mean to this integral was known to Gauss (Borwein and Bailey 2003, pp. 13-15).
The derivative of the AGM is given by
where ,
is a complete elliptic integral
of the first kind, and
is the complete
elliptic integral of the second kind.
A series expansion for is given by
|
(16) |
The AGM has the properties
Solutions to the differential equation
|
(21) |
are given by
and
.
A generalization of the arithmetic-geometric mean is
|
(22) |
which is related to solutions of the differential equation
|
(23) |
The case
corresponds to the arithmetic-geometric mean via
The case
gives the cubic relative
discussed by Borwein and Borwein (1990, 1991) and Borwein (1996). For , this function satisfies the functional equation
|
(28) |
It therefore turns out that for iteration with and
and
so
|
(31) |
where
|
(32) |
See also
Arithmetic Mean, Arithmetic-Harmonic Mean, Gauss's Constant, Geometric Mean, Lemniscate Function
Related Wolfram sites
http://functions.wolfram.com/EllipticFunctions/ArithmeticGeometricMean/
Explore with Wolfram|Alpha
References
Abramowitz, M. and Stegun, I. A. (Eds.). "The Process of the Arithmetic-Geometric Mean." ยง17.6 in Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables, 9th printing. New York: Dover, pp. 571 and 598-599, 1972.Borwein, J. and Bailey, D. Mathematics by Experiment: Plausible Reasoning in the 21st Century. Wellesley, MA: A K Peters, 2003.Borwein, J. M. Problem 10281. "A Cubic Relative of the AGM." Amer. Math. Monthly 103, 181-183, 1996.Borwein, J. M. and Borwein, P. B. Pi & the AGM: A Study in Analytic Number Theory and Computational Complexity. New York: Wiley, 1987.Borwein, J. M. and Borwein, P. B. "A Remarkable Cubic Iteration." In Computational Method & Function Theory: Proc. Conference Held in Valparaiso, Chile, March 13-18, 1989 (Ed. A. Dold, B. Eckmann, F. Takens, E. B. Saff, S. Ruscheweyh, L. C. Salinas, and R. S. Varga). New York: Springer-Verlag, 1990.Borwein, J. M. and Borwein, P. B. "A Cubic Counterpart of Jacobi's Identity and the AGM." Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 323, 691-701, 1991.Press, W. H.; Flannery, B. P.; Teukolsky, S. A.; and Vetterling, W. T. Numerical Recipes in FORTRAN: The Art of Scientific Computing, 2nd ed. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, pp. 906-907, 1992.Sloane, N. J. A. Sequences A014549, A068521, A084895, A084896, and A084897 in "The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences."
Referenced on Wolfram|Alpha
Cite this as:
Weisstein, Eric W. "Arithmetic-Geometric Mean." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Resource. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/Arithmetic-GeometricMean.html