How do you find the Maclaurin series for #e^x#?

1 Answer
Nov 15, 2016

# e^x = 1 + x + x^2/(2!) + x^3/(3!) + x^4/(4!) +... + x^n/(n!) +... #

Explanation:

The Maclaurin series is obtained by the Power Series:
# f(x) = f(0) + f'(0)x/(0!) + f''(0)x^2/(2!) + f^((3))(0)x^3/(3!) + ... #

So with #f(x)=e^x# we have
# f(x)=e^x => f(0)=1 #
# f'(x)=e^x => f'(0)=1 #
# f''(x)=e^x => f''(0)=1 #
# f^((3))(x)=e^x => f^((3))(0)=1 #
And in clearly:
# f^((n))(x)=e^x => f^((n))(0)=1 #

So the Maclaurin series is:
# e^x = 1 + 1x/(0!) + 1x^2/(2!) + 1x^3/(3!) + 1x^4/(4!) +... + 1x^n/(n!) +... #
# e^x = 1 + x + x^2/(2!) + x^3/(3!) + x^4/(4!) +... + x^n/(n!) +... #

Which is probably one of the most important mathematical power series !