Damian Rössler on Tue, 13 Jun 2023 13:24:56 +0200 |
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Re: Problème avec intnum |
Thank you for the explanations. I understand now. Regards, Damian Rössler > On 12 Jun 2023, at 9:50 pm, Bill Allombert <Bill.Allombert@math.u-bordeaux.fr> wrote: > > On Mon, Jun 12, 2023 at 09:09:50PM +0100, Damian Rossler wrote: >> Dear Bill, thank you for this. What do you mean by « an asymptotic singularity at I »? >> The integral is along the real line, so it never meets any singularity of the function (in particular, log(x+I) is always well-defined). > > I meant that: > >>> PARI uses the double exponential method that does a change of variable. Unfortunately this causes the singularity >>> at I to get closer and closer to the integration path when N goes to infinity. > > As you say, there are no singularity. However if you integrate over [-x,x], > after variable change, the singularity became closer and closer to the > integration interval when x goes to infinity. This is explained for example in > Pascal Molin thesis. > > If you integrate on [-oo,oo] PARI uses a different variable change that does > not have this effect: > > ? intnum(x=-oo,oo,log(x+I)/(x^2+1)) > %1 = 2.1775860903036021305006888982376139473+4.9348022005446793094172454999380755677*I > ? Pi*log(2)+I*Pi^2/2 > %2 = 2.1775860903036021305006888982376139473+4.9348022005446793094172454999380755677*I > > Cheers, > Bill.