Skip to main content
Calkulon

learn.howToCalculate

learn.whatIsHeading

Newton's Method (Newton-Raphson method) is an iterative algorithm for finding roots of a differentiable function f(x) — that is, values of x where f(x) = 0. Starting from an initial guess x₀, it repeatedly applies the update formula to converge to a root. When it converges, it converges quadratically — the number of correct decimal places roughly doubles with each iteration.

Formel

xₙ₊₁ = xₙ − f(xₙ) / f'(xₙ)

Steg-för-steg-guide

  1. 1xₙ₊₁ = xₙ − f(xₙ) / f'(xₙ)
  2. 2f'(x) is approximated numerically: f'(x) ≈ [f(x+h) − f(x−h)] / 2h, h = 10⁻⁷
  3. 3Converges when |xₙ₊₁ − xₙ| < 10⁻¹⁰
  4. 4May fail if f'(x₀) ≈ 0 or if starting guess is far from a root
  5. 5Multiple roots require different initial guesses

Lösta exempel

Ingång
f(x) = x³ − x − 2, x₀ = 1.5
Resultat
Root ≈ 1.5213797
Converges in ~5 iterations
Ingång
f(x) = x² − 2, x₀ = 1.0
Resultat
Root ≈ 1.4142136 (√2)
Newton's method can compute square roots

Vanliga frågor

What is Newtons Method?

Newton's Method (Newton-Raphson method) is an iterative algorithm for finding roots of a differentiable function f(x) — that is, values of x where f(x) = 0. Starting from an initial guess x₀, it repeatedly applies the update formula to converge to a root

How accurate is the Newtons Method calculator?

The calculator uses the standard published formula for newtons method. Results are accurate to the precision of the inputs you provide. For financial, medical, or legal decisions, always verify with a qualified professional.

What units does the Newtons Method calculator use?

This calculator works with inches, watts. You can enter values in the units shown — the calculator handles all conversions internally.

What formula does the Newtons Method calculator use?

The core formula is: xₙ₊₁ = xₙ − f(xₙ) / f'(xₙ). Each step in the calculation is shown so you can verify the result manually.

Redo att beräkna? Prova den kostnadsfria Newtons Method-kalkylatorn

Prova själv →

Inställningar

IntegritetVillkorOm© 2026 Calkulon