Neumann polynomial

In mathematics, a Neumann polynomial, introduced by Carl Neumann for the special case , is a polynomial in 1/z used to expand functions in term of Bessel functions.[1]

The first few polynomials are

A general form for the polynomial is

and they have the "generating function"

where J are Bessel functions.

To expand a function f in the form

for , compute

where and c is the distance of the nearest singularity of from .

Examples

An example is the extension

or the more general Sonine formula[2]

where is Gegenbauer's polynomial. Then,

the confluent hypergeometric function

and in particular

the index shift formula

the Taylor expansion (addition formula)

(cf.[3]) and the expansion of the integral of the Bessel function,

are of the same type.

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gollark: <@543131534685765673> 2fd575c5d947cae5b79f286a08991fab04c65636c6cf6a3b7218f0858740b27a09d5d31b1d65c3ab7b356b134298ef9c13a475eb4e00b81d4dfdc8228150969e

See also

Notes

  1. Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 363, 9.1.82 ff.
  2. Erdélyi et al. 1955 II.7.10.1, p.64
  3. Gradshteyn, Izrail Solomonovich; Ryzhik, Iosif Moiseevich; Geronimus, Yuri Veniaminovich; Tseytlin, Michail Yulyevich; Jeffrey, Alan (2015) [October 2014]. "8.515.1.". In Zwillinger, Daniel; Moll, Victor Hugo (eds.). Table of Integrals, Series, and Products. Translated by Scripta Technica, Inc. (8 ed.). Academic Press, Inc. p. 944. ISBN 0-12-384933-0. LCCN 2014010276.
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