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We now note that \eqref{14} can be rewritten, after expanding $1 /\left(1+r^2 \delta^2\right)$ into a geometric series, as
\[
\begin{aligned}
\frac{\pi}{4} &=\lim _{n \rightarrow \infty}\left[\delta \sum_{r=1}^n 1-\delta^3 \sum_{r=1}^n r^2+\delta^5 \sum_{r=1}^n r^4-\cdots\right] \\
&=\lim _{n \rightarrow \infty}\left[1-\frac{1}{n^3} \sum_{r=1}^n r^2+\frac{1}{n^5} \sum_{r=1}^n r^4-\cdots\right] \\
&=1-\frac{1}{3}+\frac{1}{5}-\frac{1}{7}+\cdots
\end{aligned}
\]
where we have used relation \eqref{15} and the fact that $\delta=1 / n$. Now consider the approximation \eqref{12} and its application to the transformation of series. Suppose that
\[
\sigma_n=1-\frac{1}{3}+\frac{1}{5}-\frac{1}{7}+\cdots \pm \frac{1}{n} \mp f(n+1),
\]
where $f(n+1)$ is a rational function of $n$ which will make $\sigma_n$ a better approximation of $\pi / 4$ than the $n$th partial sum $S_n$. Changing $n$ to $n-2$ we get
\[
\sigma_{n-2}=1-\frac{1}{3}+\frac{1}{5}-\cdots \mp \frac{1}{n-2} \pm f(n-1)
\]
Subtracting the second relation from the first,
\[\tag{18}\label{18}
\pm u_n=\sigma_n-\sigma_{n-2}=\pm \frac{1}{n} \mp f(n+1) \mp f(n-1) .
\]
Then
\[
\begin{aligned}
\sigma_n &=\sigma_{n-2} \pm u_n \\
&=\sigma_{n-4} \mp u_{n-2} \pm u_n \\
&=\cdots=\sigma_1-u_3+u_5-u_7+\cdots \pm u_n \\
&=1-f(2)-u_3+u_5-u_7+\cdots u_n
\end{aligned}
\]
It is clear that
\[
\lim _{n \rightarrow \infty} \sigma_n=\frac{\pi}{4}
\]
and therefore
\[\tag{19}\label{19}
\frac{\pi}{4}=1-f(2)-u_3+u_5-u_7+\cdots .
\]
Thus, we have a new series for $\pi / 4$ which depends on how the function $f(n)$ is chosen. Naturally, the aim is to choose $f(n)$ in such a way that \eqref{19} is more rapidly convergent than (1). This is the idea behind the series \eqref{13}. Now equation \eqref{18} implies that
\[\tag{20}\label{20}
f(n+1)+f(n-1)=\frac{1}{n}-u_n
\]
For (19) to be more rapidly convergent than (1), $u_n$ should be $o(1 / n)$, that is, negligible compared to $1 / n$. It is reasonable to assume $f(n+1) \simeq f(n-1) \simeq f(n)$. These observations together with \eqref{20} imply that $f(n)=1 / 2 n$ is a possible rational approximation in equation (12). With this $f(n)$, the value of $u_n$ is given by \eqref{20} to be
\[
u_n=\frac{1}{n}-\frac{1}{2(n+1)}-\frac{1}{2(n-1)}=-\frac{1}{n^3-n} .
\]
Substituting this in (19) gives us (13), which is
\[
\frac{\pi}{4}=1-\frac{1}{4}+\frac{1}{3^3-3}-\frac{1}{5^3-5}+\frac{1}{7^3-7}-\cdots .
\]
The other series
\[
\frac{\pi}{4}=\frac{4}{1^5+4 \cdot 1}-\frac{4}{3^5+4 \cdot 3}+\frac{4}{5^5+4 \cdot 5}-\cdots
\]
is obtained by taking $f(n)=\frac{n / 2}{n^2+1}$ in (19).
It should be mentioned that Newton was aware of the correction $f_1(n)=1 / 2 n$. For in the letter to Oldenburg, referred to earlier, he says, "By the series of Leibniz also if half the term in the last place be added and some other like devices be employed, the computation can be carried to many figures." However, he says nothing about transforming the series by means of this correction.
It appears that Nilakantha was aware of the impossibility of finding a finite series of rational numbers to represent $\pi$. In the Aryabhatiya-bhasya he writes, "If the diameter, measured using some unit of measure, were commensurable with that unit, then the circumference would not likewise allow itself to be measured by means of the same unit; so likewise in the case where the circumference is measurable by some unit, then the diameter cannot be measured using the same unit." 19
The Yuktibhasa contains a proof of the arctan series also and it is obtained in exactly the same way except that one rectifies only a part of the $1 / 8$ circle.
It can be shown that if $\pi / 4=S_n+f(n)$, where $S_n$ is the $n$th partial sum, then $f(n)$ has the continued fraction representation
\[
f(n)=\frac{1}{2}\left[\frac{1}{n+} \frac{1^2}{n+} \frac{2^2}{n+} \frac{3^2}{n+} \cdots\right] .
\]
Moreover, the first three convergents are
\[
f_1(n)=\frac{1}{2 n}, \quad f_2(n)=\frac{n / 2}{n^2+1} \text { and } \quad f_3(n)=\frac{(n / 2)^2+1}{\left(n^2+5\right) n / 2},
\]
which are the values quoted in \eqref{13}. Clearly, Nilakantha was using some procedure which gave the successive convergents of the continued fraction (21) but the text contains no suggestion that (20) was actually known to him. This continued fraction implies that
\[
\frac{2}{4-\pi}=2+\frac{1^2}{2+} \frac{2^2}{2+} \frac{3^2}{2+} \cdots
\]
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