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Constructing real tetration solutions - 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: Constructing real tetration solutions (/showthread.php?tid=1247) |
Constructing real tetration solutions - Daniel - 12/22/2019 Has anyone considered using the countable complex fixed points to construct real tetrational solutions? RE: Constructing real tetration solutions - bo198214 - 12/22/2019 Yes, Daniel that's the Kneser-Solution and many of the other methods discussed here are real-analytic solutions based on the primary complex fixed points. RE: Constructing real tetration solutions - Daniel - 12/23/2019 (12/22/2019, 10:28 PM)bo198214 Wrote: Yes, Daniel that's the Kneser-Solution and many of the other methods discussed here are real-analytic solutions based on the primary complex fixed points. Yes, I'm now familiar with Kneser's approach thanks to your exposition of his work. I was thinking in terms of a countable number of fixed points, but given Kneser's work my requirement might be overkill. Daniel RE: Constructing real tetration solutions - bo198214 - 12/23/2019 As far as I know nobody managed to use any other fixpoint-pair than the primary one. To use all the fixpoints seems to be a much stronger demand. RE: Constructing real tetration solutions - sheldonison - 12/24/2019 (12/23/2019, 03:56 PM)bo198214 Wrote: As far as I know nobody managed to use any other fixpoint-pair than the primary one. Daniel, Jay, Please see this thread https://math.eretrandre.org/tetrationforum/showthread.php?tid=452 About a year and half later, post#18, I generated a tetration solution from the secondary fixed point with the caveat that the derivative at the real axis goes to zero; see post#18; #19 in the thread I just linked to. That solution has f' and f'' and tet(-1)=0; one can imagine that perhaps with the next fixed point pair, perhaps tet',tet'',tet''',tet'''' would all need to be zero .... I haven't revisited this post since 2011. |