Stirling's approximation: Difference between revisions
		
		
		
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| Carl McBride (talk | contribs) m (Added applications section.) | Carl McBride (talk | contribs)   (Added a table) | ||
| Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
| :<math>\ln N! \sim \int_1^N \ln x\,dx \sim N \ln N -N .</math> | :<math>\ln N! \sim \int_1^N \ln x\,dx \sim N \ln N -N .</math> | ||
| after some further manipulation one arrives at  | |||
| :<math>N! = \sqrt{2 \pi N} \; N^{N} e^{-N} e^{\lambda_N}</math> | |||
| where | |||
| :<math>\frac{1}{12N+1} < \lambda_N < \frac{1}{12N}.</math> | |||
| For example: | |||
| {| border="1" | |||
| |-  | |||
| | N || N! (exact) || N! (Stirling)  || Error (%) | |||
| |-  | |||
| |5 ||  120   || 118.019168 || 1.016 | |||
| |-  | |||
| |6  || 720  ||  710.078185 || 1.014 | |||
| |-  | |||
| |7  || 5040  || 4980.39583   || 1.012 | |||
| |-  | |||
| |8  ||  40320 ||   39902.3955 || 1.010 | |||
| |-  | |||
| |9  ||   362880||  359536.873  || 1.009 | |||
| |-  | |||
| |10  || 3628800  ||   3598695.62  || 1.008 | |||
| |} | |||
| As one usually deals with number of the order of the [[Avogadro constant ]](<math>10^{23}</math>) this formula is essentially  exact. | |||
| ==Applications in statistical mechanics== | ==Applications in statistical mechanics== | ||
| *[[Ideal gas Helmholtz energy function]] | *[[Ideal gas Helmholtz energy function]] | ||
| [[Category: Mathematics]] | [[Category: Mathematics]] | ||
Revision as of 19:14, 4 November 2008
James Stirling (1692-1770, Scotland)
Because of Euler-MacLaurin formula
where B1 = −1/2, B2 = 1/6, B3 = 0, B4 = −1/30, B5 = 0, B6 = 1/42, B7 = 0, B8 = −1/30, ... are the Bernoulli numbers, and R is an error term which is normally small for suitable values of p.
Then, for large N,
after some further manipulation one arrives at
where
For example:
| N | N! (exact) | N! (Stirling) | Error (%) | 
| 5 | 120 | 118.019168 | 1.016 | 
| 6 | 720 | 710.078185 | 1.014 | 
| 7 | 5040 | 4980.39583 | 1.012 | 
| 8 | 40320 | 39902.3955 | 1.010 | 
| 9 | 362880 | 359536.873 | 1.009 | 
| 10 | 3628800 | 3598695.62 | 1.008 | 
As one usually deals with number of the order of the Avogadro constant () this formula is essentially exact.