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Redoing Tetration.org - Printable Version +- Tetration Forum (https://tetrationforum.org) +-- Forum: Tetration and Related Topics (https://tetrationforum.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Mathematical and General Discussion (https://tetrationforum.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Thread: Redoing Tetration.org (/showthread.php?tid=1773) |
Redoing Tetration.org - Daniel - 09/27/2023 I am rewriting my Tetration.org website, which is now twenty years old. There are a number of questions asked over and over again here, on MathOverflow.net and Math.stackexchange.com that I want to address on my website. A few fundamental questions follow:
What other fundamental questions should I deal with? RE: Redoing Tetration.org - marracco - 09/30/2023 Tetration of real variable should not be considered a single valued function. It leaves out the quasi periodic, square wave behavior, the multiple asymptotes. It at least has 5 branches. RE: Redoing Tetration.org - Daniel - 10/01/2023 (09/30/2023, 05:44 PM)marracco Wrote: Tetration of real variable should not be considered a single valued function. It leaves out the quasi periodic, square wave behavior, the multiple asymptotes. It at least has 5 branches. Thanks for the feedback. I think I know what you are talking about, but it would be nice if you could expand on your answer. RE: Redoing Tetration.org - marracco - 10/02/2023 (10/01/2023, 05:48 PM)Daniel Wrote:(09/30/2023, 05:44 PM)marracco Wrote: Tetration of real variable should not be considered a single valued function. It leaves out the quasi periodic, square wave behavior, the multiple asymptotes. It at least has 5 branches. Take a base \(1 < b \leq e^{e^{-1}}\), for example, \(b=\sqrt{2}\) The exponential function \(y_(x)=b^x\) has 5 parts:
Now, for bases \(0 \leq b <e^{-e}\), the tetration function oscillates, between 2 asymptotes, rapidly converging to a square wave function. The asymptotes and the center are the 3 solutions \(c\) of \(b^{c^c}=c\). Those asymptotes must be related to the other asymptotes for bases \(b>1\) in some way. There must exist some transformation that converts the asymptotes, and the Z curve must convert into the part of the curve that switches between asymptotes. The main branch must convert into the upper side of the square wave, and the upper super exponential branch must be transformed into the lower side of the square wave. Maybe tetration introduces transfinite numbers which turn the main branch into a square wave function at the transfinite scale, and we only see the real-number part commonly graphed as the main branch. |