Given the first 20-100 coefficients of a typical generating function of the
type that arises in many problems of statistical mechanics or enumerative
combinatorics, we show that the method of differential approximants performs
surprisingly well in predicting (approximately) subsequent coefficients. These
can then be used by the ratio method to obtain improved estimates of critical
parameters. In favourable cases, given only the first 20 coefficients, the next
100 coefficients are predicted with useful accuracy. More surprisingly, this is
also the case when the method of differential approximants does not do a useful
job in estimating the critical parameters, such as those cases in which one has
stretched exponential asymptotic behaviour. Nevertheless, the coefficients are
predicted with surprising accuracy. As one consequence, significant computer
time can be saved in enumeration problems where several runs would normally be
made, modulo different primes, and the coefficients constructed from their
values modulo different primes. Another is in the checking of newly calculated
coefficients. We believe that this concept of approximate series extension
opens up a whole new chapter in the method of series analysis.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1405.532