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Encyclopedia > Recurrence


In mathematics, a recurrence relation, also known as a difference equation, is an equation which defines a sequence recursively: each term of the sequence is defined as a function of the preceding terms.


For example (the logistic map):

Some simply defined recurrence relations can have very complex (chaotic) behaviours and are sometimes studied by physicists and mathematicians in a field of mathematics known as nonlinear analysis.


Solving a recurrence relation means obtaining a non-recursive function of n.

Contents

Linear homogeneous recurrence relations with constant coefficients

The term linear means that each term of the sequence is defined as a linear function of the preceding terms. The coefficients and the constants may depend on n, even non-linearly.


A special case is when the coefficients do not depend on n.


Homogeneous means that the constant term of the relation is zero.


In order to obtain a unique solution to the linear recurrence there must be some initial conditions, as the first number in the sequence can not depend on other numbers in the sequence and must be set to some value.


Solving linear recurrence relations

Solutions to recurrence relations are found by systematic means, often by using generating functions (formal power series) or by noticing the fact that rn is a solution for particular values of r.


For recurrence relations in the form:

we have the solution rn:

Dividing through by rn - 2 we get:

This is known as the characteristic equation of the recurrence relation. Solve for r to obtain the two roots λ12, and if these roots are distinct, we have the solution

while if they are identical (when A2+4B=0), we have

where C and D are constants.


Additionally, if the equation is of the form an = Aan - 1 + B you can substitute 2 for n and get r2 = Ar + B as above. The constants C and D can be found from the "side conditions" that are often given as a0 = a, a1 = b.


Different solutions are obtained depending on the nature of the roots of the characteristic equation.


If the recurrence is inhomogeneous, a particular solution can be found by the method of undetermined coefficients and the solution is the sum of the solution of the homogeneous and the particular solutions.


Interestingly, the method for solving linear differential equations is similar to the method above — the "intelligent guess" for linear differential equations is ex.


This is not a coincidence. If you consider the Taylor series of the solution to a linear differential equation:

you see that the coefficients of the series are given by the n-th derivative of f(x) evaluated at the point a. The differential equation provides a linear difference equation relating these coefficients.


This equivalence can be used to quickly solve for the recurrence relationship for the coefficients in the power series solution of a linear differential equation.


Example: Fibonacci numbers

The Fibonacci numbers are defined using a linear recurrence relation:

and has solution (letting be the golden ratio)

The initial conditions are:

Therefore, the sequence of Fibonacci numbers is:

0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89 ...

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Imaginis - Breast Cancer Recurrence (1151 words)
Regional recurrence: A regional recurrence of breast cancer is more serious than local recurrence because it usually indicates that the cancer has spread past the breast and the axillary (underarm) lymph nodes.
Local recurrences with implants are most often in front of the implant, and recurrences with TRAM flap procedures are along the edge of the breast skin (not in the flap).
Regional breast cancer recurrences are rare, occurring in approximately 2% of all breast cancer cases.
PlanetMath: Wilson's primeth recurrence (162 words)
This is Wilson's primeth recurrence which results in the sequence 1, 2, 3, 5, 11, 31, 127, 709, 5381, 52711, 648391, 9737333, 174440041,...
Wilson's prime-th recurrence, primeth recurrence, prime-th recurrence, primeth sequence, prime-th sequence
This is version 2 of Wilson's primeth recurrence, born on 2006-08-24, modified 2006-08-25.
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