Solution of Real Cubic Equations without Cardano's Formula
Abstract: Building on a classification of zeros of cubic equations due to the $12$-th century Persian mathematician Sharaf al-Din Tusi, together with Smale's theory of {\it point estimation}, we derive an efficient recipe for computing high-precision approximation to a real root of an arbitrary real cubic equation. First, via reversible transformations we reduce any real cubic equation into one of four canonical forms with $0$, $\pm 1$ coefficients, except for the constant term as $\pm q$, $q \geq 0$. Next, given any form, if $\rho_q$ is an approximation to $\sqrt[3]{q}$ to within a relative error of five percent, we prove a {\it seed} $x_0$ in ${ \rho_q, \pm .95 \rho_q, -\frac{1}{3}, 1 }$ can be selected such that in $t$ Newton iterations $|x_t - \theta_q| \leq \sqrt[3]{q}\cdot 2{-2{t}}$ for some real root $\theta_q$. While computing a good seed, even for approximation of $\sqrt[3]{q}$, is considered to be ``somewhat of black art'' (see Wikipedia), as we justify, $\rho_q$ is readily computable from {\it mantissa} and {\it exponent} of $q$. It follows that the above approach gives a simple recipe for numerical approximation of solutions of real cubic equations independent of Cardano's formula.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.