Hypergeometric Polynomial
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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, Jacobi polynomials (occasionally called hypergeometric polynomials) P_n^(x) are a class of classical orthogonal polynomials. They are orthogonal with respect to the weight (1-x)^\alpha(1+x)^\beta on the interval 1,1/math>. The Gegenbauer polynomials, and thus also the Legendre, Zernike and
Chebyshev polynomials The Chebyshev polynomials are two sequences of polynomials related to the cosine and sine functions, notated as T_n(x) and U_n(x). They can be defined in several equivalent ways, one of which starts with trigonometric functions: The Chebyshe ...
, are special cases of the Jacobi polynomials. The definition is in IV.1; the differential equation – in IV.2; Rodrigues' formula is in IV.3; the generating function is in IV.4; the recurrent relation is in IV.5. The Jacobi polynomials were introduced by Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.


Definitions


Via the hypergeometric function

The Jacobi polynomials are defined via the hypergeometric function as follows: :P_n^(z)=\frac\,_2F_1\left(-n,1+\alpha+\beta+n;\alpha+1;\tfrac(1-z)\right), where (\alpha+1)_n is Pochhammer's symbol (for the rising factorial). In this case, the series for the hypergeometric function is finite, therefore one obtains the following equivalent expression: :P_n^ (z) = \frac \sum_^n \frac \left(\frac\right)^m.


Rodrigues' formula

An equivalent definition is given by Rodrigues' formula: :P_n^(z) = \frac (1-z)^ (1+z)^ \frac \left\. If \alpha = \beta = 0 , then it reduces to the Legendre polynomials: : P_(z) = \frac \frac ( z^2 - 1 )^n \; .


Alternate expression for real argument

For real x the Jacobi polynomial can alternatively be written as :P_n^(x)= \sum_^n \left(\frac\right)^ \left(\frac\right)^ and for integer n : = \begin \frac & n \geq 0 \\ 0 & n < 0 \end where \Gamma(z) is the
gamma function In mathematics, the gamma function (represented by , the capital letter gamma from the Greek alphabet) is one commonly used extension of the factorial function to complex numbers. The gamma function is defined for all complex numbers except ...
. In the special case that the four quantities n, n+\alpha, n+\beta, n+\alpha+\beta are nonnegative integers, the Jacobi polynomial can be written as The sum extends over all integer values of s for which the arguments of the factorials are nonnegative.


Special cases

:P_0^(z)= 1, :P_1^(z)= (\alpha+1) + (\alpha+\beta+2)\frac, :P_2^(z)= \frac + (\alpha+2)(\alpha+\beta+3)\frac + \frac\left(\frac\right)^2.


Basic properties


Orthogonality

The Jacobi polynomials satisfy the orthogonality condition :\int_^1 (1-x)^ (1+x)^ P_m^ (x)P_n^ (x)\,dx =\frac \frac \delta_, \qquad \alpha,\ \beta > -1. As defined, they do not have unit norm with respect to the weight. This can be corrected by dividing by the square root of the right hand side of the equation above, when n=m. Although it does not yield an orthonormal basis, an alternative normalization is sometimes preferred due to its simplicity: :P_n^ (1) = .


Symmetry relation

The polynomials have the symmetry relation :P_n^ (-z) = (-1)^n P_n^ (z); thus the other terminal value is :P_n^ (-1) = (-1)^n .


Derivatives

The kth derivative of the explicit expression leads to :\frac P_n^ (z) = \frac P_^ (z).


Differential equation

The Jacobi polynomial P_n^ is a solution of the second order linear homogeneous differential equation : \left (1-x^2 \right )y'' + ( \beta-\alpha - (\alpha + \beta + 2)x )y' + n(n+\alpha+\beta+1) y = 0.


Recurrence relations

The recurrence relation for the Jacobi polynomials of fixed \alpha, \beta is: : \begin &2n (n + \alpha + \beta) (2n + \alpha + \beta - 2) P_n^(z) \\ &\qquad= (2n+\alpha + \beta-1) \Big\ P_^(z) - 2 (n+\alpha - 1) (n + \beta-1) (2n+\alpha + \beta) P_^(z), \end for n=2,3,\ldots. Writing for brevity a:=n + \alpha , b:=n + \beta and c:=a+b=2n + \alpha+ \beta, this becomes in terms of a,b,c : 2n (c-n)(c-2) P_n^(z) =(c-1) \Big\ P_^(z)-2 (a-1)(b-1) c\; P_^(z). Since the Jacobi polynomials can be described in terms of the hypergeometric function, recurrences of the hypergeometric function give equivalent recurrences of the Jacobi polynomials. In particular, Gauss' contiguous relations correspond to the identities : \begin (z-1) \frac P_n^(z) & = \frac (z-1)(1+\alpha+\beta+n)P_^ \\ & = n P_n^ - (\alpha+n) P_^ \\ & =(1+\alpha+\beta+n) \left( P_n^ - P_^ \right) \\ & =(\alpha+n) P_n^ - \alpha P_n^ \\ & =\frac \\ & =\frac \\ & =\frac \left( \beta P_n^ - (\beta+n) P_^ \right) \, . \end


Generating function

The
generating function In mathematics, a generating function is a way of encoding an infinite sequence of numbers () by treating them as the coefficients of a formal power series. This series is called the generating function of the sequence. Unlike an ordinary seri ...
of the Jacobi polynomials is given by : \sum_^\infty P_n^(z) t^n = 2^ R^ (1 - t + R)^ (1 + t + R)^, where : R = R(z, t) = \left(1 - 2zt + t^2\right)^~, and the branch of square root is chosen so that R(z, 0) = 1.


Asymptotics of Jacobi polynomials

For x in the interior of 1,1/math>, the asymptotics of P_n^ for large n is given by the Darboux formula :P_n^(\cos \theta) = n^k(\theta)\cos (N\theta + \gamma) + O \left (n^ \right ), where : \begin k(\theta) &= \pi^ \sin^ \tfrac \cos^ \tfrac,\\ N &= n + \tfrac (\alpha+\beta+1),\\ \gamma &= - \tfrac \left (\alpha + \tfrac \right ), \end and the "O" term is uniform on the interval varepsilon,\pi-\varepsilon/math> for every \varepsilon>0. The asymptotics of the Jacobi polynomials near the points \pm 1 is given by the Mehler–Heine formula : \begin \lim_ n^P_n^\left(\cos \left ( \tfrac \right ) \right) &= \left(\tfrac\right)^ J_\alpha(z)\\ \lim_ n^P_n^\left(\cos \left (\pi - \tfrac \right) \right) &= \left(\tfrac\right)^ J_\beta(z) \end where the limits are uniform for z in a bounded
domain Domain may refer to: Mathematics *Domain of a function, the set of input values for which the (total) function is defined **Domain of definition of a partial function **Natural domain of a partial function **Domain of holomorphy of a function * Do ...
. The asymptotics outside 1,1/math> is less explicit.


Applications


Wigner d-matrix

The expression () allows the expression of the Wigner d-matrix d^j_(\phi) (for 0\leq \phi\leq 4\pi) in terms of Jacobi polynomials: :d^j_(\phi) =\left \frac\right \left(\sin\tfrac\right)^ \left(\cos\tfrac\right)^ P_^(\cos \phi).


See also

* Askey–Gasper inequality * Big q-Jacobi polynomials * Continuous q-Jacobi polynomials * Little q-Jacobi polynomials * Pseudo Jacobi polynomials * Jacobi process * Gegenbauer polynomials * Romanovski polynomials


Notes


Further reading

* *


External links

*
{{Authority control Special hypergeometric functions Orthogonal polynomials