Let,
and
as in (5.13). Then
![]()
where
represents the full derivative of
with respect to
. In particular,
is algebraic for rational arguments.
We know that is related via
to
and we know that
is
related via differentiation to K. (See (5.7) and (5.13).) Note that
corresponds to
. Thus from (7.17) some
relation like that of the above theorem must exist. The actual derivation
requires some careful algebraic manipulation. (See [11]), where it has
also been made entirely explicit for
and 7, and where
numerous algebraic values are determined for
Examples
.) In the case
we can specialize with some considerable knowledge
of quintic modular equations to get:
LetThis couples with Ramanujan's quintic modular equation to provide a derivation of Algorithm 2.. Then
![]()
Algorithm 2 results from specializing Theorem 3 with and coupling it with a
quartic modular equation. The quartic equation in question is just two steps of the
corresponding quadratic equation which is Legendre's form of the
arithmetic geometric mean iteration
, namely:
An algebraic p-th order algorithm for is derived from coupling Theorem 3 with a
pth-order modular equation. The substantial details which are skirted here are
available in [11].