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Digamma function

In mathematics, the digamma function is defined as the logarithmic derivative of the gamma function:[1][2][3]

The digamma function ,
visualized using domain coloring
Real part plots of the digamma and the next three polygamma functions along the real line

It is the first of the polygamma functions. This function is strictly increasing and strictly concave on ,[4] and it asymptotically behaves as[5]

for large arguments () in the sector with some infinitesimally small positive constant .

The digamma function is often denoted as or Ϝ[6] (the uppercase form of the archaic Greek consonant digamma meaning double-gamma).

Relation to harmonic numbers

The gamma function obeys the equation

 

Taking the derivative with respect to z gives:

 

Dividing by Γ(z + 1) or the equivalent zΓ(z) gives:

 

or:

 

Since the harmonic numbers are defined for positive integers n as

 

the digamma function is related to them by

 

where H0 = 0, and γ is the Euler–Mascheroni constant. For half-integer arguments the digamma function takes the values

 

Integral representations

If the real part of z is positive then the digamma function has the following integral representation due to Gauss:[7]

 

Combining this expression with an integral identity for the Euler–Mascheroni constant   gives:

 

The integral is Euler's harmonic number  , so the previous formula may also be written

 

A consequence is the following generalization of the recurrence relation:

 

An integral representation due to Dirichlet is:[7]

 

Gauss's integral representation can be manipulated to give the start of the asymptotic expansion of  .[8]

 

This formula is also a consequence of Binet's first integral for the gamma function. The integral may be recognized as a Laplace transform.

Binet's second integral for the gamma function gives a different formula for   which also gives the first few terms of the asymptotic expansion:[9]

 

From the definition of   and the integral representation of the gamma function, one obtains

 

with  .[10]

Infinite product representation

The function   is an entire function,[11] and it can be represented by the infinite product

 

Here   is the kth zero of   (see below), and   is the Euler–Mascheroni constant.

Note: This is also equal to   due to the definition of the digamma function:  .

Series representation

Series formula

Euler's product formula for the gamma function, combined with the functional equation and an identity for the Euler–Mascheroni constant, yields the following expression for the digamma function, valid in the complex plane outside the negative integers (Abramowitz and Stegun 6.3.16):[1]

 

Equivalently,

 

Evaluation of sums of rational functions

The above identity can be used to evaluate sums of the form

 

where p(n) and q(n) are polynomials of n.

Performing partial fraction on un in the complex field, in the case when all roots of q(n) are simple roots,

 

For the series to converge,

 

otherwise the series will be greater than the harmonic series and thus diverge. Hence

 

and

 

With the series expansion of higher rank polygamma function a generalized formula can be given as

 

provided the series on the left converges.

Taylor series

The digamma has a rational zeta series, given by the Taylor series at z = 1. This is

 

which converges for |z| < 1. Here, ζ(n) is the Riemann zeta function. This series is easily derived from the corresponding Taylor's series for the Hurwitz zeta function.

Newton series

The Newton series for the digamma, sometimes referred to as Stern series,[12][13] reads

 

where (s
k
)
is the binomial coefficient. It may also be generalized to

 

where m = 2,3,4,...[13]

Series with Gregory's coefficients, Cauchy numbers and Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind

There exist various series for the digamma containing rational coefficients only for the rational arguments. In particular, the series with Gregory's coefficients Gn is

 
 
 

where (v)n is the rising factorial (v)n = v(v+1)(v+2) ... (v+n-1), Gn(k) are the Gregory coefficients of higher order with Gn(1) = Gn, Γ is the gamma function and ζ is the Hurwitz zeta function.[14][13] Similar series with the Cauchy numbers of the second kind Cn reads[14][13]

 

A series with the Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind has the following form[13]

 

where ψn(a) are the Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind defined by the generating equation

 

It may be generalized to

 

where the polynomials Nn,r(a) are given by the following generating equation

 

so that Nn,1(a) = ψn(a).[13] Similar expressions with the logarithm of the gamma function involve these formulas[13]

 

and

 

where   and  .

Reflection formula

The digamma function satisfies a reflection formula similar to that of the gamma function:

 

Recurrence formula and characterization

The digamma function satisfies the recurrence relation

 

Thus, it can be said to "telescope" 1 / x, for one has

 

where Δ is the forward difference operator. This satisfies the recurrence relation of a partial sum of the harmonic series, thus implying the formula

 

where γ is the Euler–Mascheroni constant.

More generally, one has

 

for  . Another series expansion is:

 ,

where   are the Bernoulli numbers. This series diverges for all z and is known as the Stirling series.

Actually, ψ is the only solution of the functional equation

 

that is monotonic on R+ and satisfies F(1) = −γ. This fact follows immediately from the uniqueness of the Γ function given its recurrence equation and convexity restriction. This implies the useful difference equation:

 

Some finite sums involving the digamma function

There are numerous finite summation formulas for the digamma function. Basic summation formulas, such as

 
 
 
 

are due to Gauss.[15][16] More complicated formulas, such as

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

are due to works of certain modern authors (see e.g. Appendix B in Blagouchine (2014)[17]).

We also have [18]

 

Gauss's digamma theorem

For positive integers r and m (r < m), the digamma function may be expressed in terms of Euler's constant and a finite number of elementary functions[19]

 

which holds, because of its recurrence equation, for all rational arguments.

Asymptotic expansion

The digamma function has the asymptotic expansion

 

where Bk is the kth Bernoulli number and ζ is the Riemann zeta function. The first few terms of this expansion are:

 

Although the infinite sum does not converge for any z, any finite partial sum becomes increasingly accurate as z increases.

The expansion can be found by applying the Euler–Maclaurin formula to the sum[20]

 

The expansion can also be derived from the integral representation coming from Binet's second integral formula for the gamma function. Expanding   as a geometric series and substituting an integral representation of the Bernoulli numbers leads to the same asymptotic series as above. Furthermore, expanding only finitely many terms of the series gives a formula with an explicit error term:

 

Inequalities

When x > 0, the function

 

is completely monotonic and in particular positive. This is a consequence of Bernstein's theorem on monotone functions applied to the integral representation coming from Binet's first integral for the gamma function. Additionally, by the convexity inequality  , the integrand in this representation is bounded above by  . Consequently

 

is also completely monotonic. It follows that, for all x > 0,

 

This recovers a theorem of Horst Alzer.[21] Alzer also proved that, for s ∈ (0, 1),

 

Related bounds were obtained by Elezovic, Giordano, and Pecaric, who proved that, for x > 0 ,

 

where   is the Euler–Mascheroni constant.[22] The constants (  and  ) appearing in these bounds are the best possible.[23]

The mean value theorem implies the following analog of Gautschi's inequality: If x > c, where c ≈ 1.461 is the unique positive real root of the digamma function, and if s > 0, then

 

Moreover, equality holds if and only if s = 1.[24]

Inspired by the harmonic mean value inequality for the classical gamma function, Horzt Alzer and Graham Jameson proved, among other things, a harmonic mean-value inequality for the digamma function:

  for  

Equality holds if and only if  .[25]

Computation and approximation

The asymptotic expansion gives an easy way to compute ψ(x) when the real part of x is large. To compute ψ(x) for small x, the recurrence relation

 

can be used to shift the value of x to a higher value. Beal[26] suggests using the above recurrence to shift x to a value greater than 6 and then applying the above expansion with terms above x14 cut off, which yields "more than enough precision" (at least 12 digits except near the zeroes).

As x goes to infinity, ψ(x) gets arbitrarily close to both ln(x − 1/2) and ln x. Going down from x + 1 to x, ψ decreases by 1 / x, ln(x − 1/2) decreases by ln (x + 1/2) / (x − 1/2), which is more than 1 / x, and ln x decreases by ln (1 + 1 / x), which is less than 1 / x. From this we see that for any positive x greater than 1/2,

 

or, for any positive x,

 

The exponential exp ψ(x) is approximately x − 1/2 for large x, but gets closer to x at small x, approaching 0 at x = 0.

For x < 1, we can calculate limits based on the fact that between 1 and 2, ψ(x) ∈ [−γ, 1 − γ], so

 

or

 

From the above asymptotic series for ψ, one can derive an asymptotic series for exp(−ψ(x)). The series matches the overall behaviour well, that is, it behaves asymptotically as it should for large arguments, and has a zero of unbounded multiplicity at the origin too.

 

This is similar to a Taylor expansion of exp(−ψ(1 / y)) at y = 0, but it does not converge.[27] (The function is not analytic at infinity.) A similar series exists for exp(ψ(x)) which starts with  

If one calculates the asymptotic series for ψ(x+1/2) it turns out that there are no odd powers of x (there is no x−1 term). This leads to the following asymptotic expansion, which saves computing terms of even order.

 

Special values

The digamma function has values in closed form for rational numbers, as a result of Gauss's digamma theorem. Some are listed below:

 

Moreover, by taking the logarithmic derivative of   or   where   is real-valued, it can easily be deduced that

 
 

Apart from Gauss's digamma theorem, no such closed formula is known for the real part in general. We have, for example, at the imaginary unit the numerical approximation

 

Roots of the digamma function

The roots of the digamma function are the saddle points of the complex-valued gamma function. Thus they lie all on the real axis. The only one on the positive real axis is the unique minimum of the real-valued gamma function on R+ at x0 = 1.46163214496836234126.... All others occur single between the poles on the negative axis:

x1 = −0.50408300826445540925...
x2 = −1.57349847316239045877...
x3 = −2.61072086844414465000...
x4 = −3.63529336643690109783...
 

Already in 1881, Charles Hermite observed[28] that

 

holds asymptotically. A better approximation of the location of the roots is given by

 

and using a further term it becomes still better

 

which both spring off the reflection formula via

 

and substituting ψ(xn) by its not convergent asymptotic expansion. The correct second term of this expansion is 1 / 2n, where the given one works well to approximate roots with small n.

Another improvement of Hermite's formula can be given:[11]

 

Regarding the zeros, the following infinite sum identities were recently proved by István Mező and Michael Hoffman[11]

 

In general, the function

 

can be determined and it is studied in detail by the cited authors.

The following results[11]

 

also hold true.

Here γ is the Euler–Mascheroni constant.

Regularization

The digamma function appears in the regularization of divergent integrals

 

this integral can be approximated by a divergent general Harmonic series, but the following value can be attached to the series

 

See also

  • Polygamma function
  • Trigamma function
  • Chebyshev expansions of the digamma function in Wimp, Jet (1961). "Polynomial approximations to integral transforms". Math. Comp. 15 (74): 174–178. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-61-99221-3.

References

  1. ^ a b Abramowitz, M.; Stegun, I. A., eds. (1972). "6.3 psi (Digamma) Function.". Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables (10th ed.). New York: Dover. pp. 258–259.
  2. ^ "NIST. Digital Library of Mathematical Functions (DLMF), Chapter 5".
  3. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Digamma function". MathWorld.
  4. ^ Alzer, Horst; Jameson, Graham (2017). "A harmonic mean inequality for the digamma function and related results" (PDF). Rendiconti del Seminario Matematico della Università di Padova. 137: 203–209. doi:10.4171/RSMUP/137-10.
  5. ^ "NIST. Digital Library of Mathematical Functions (DLMF), 5.11".
  6. ^ Pairman, Eleanor (1919). Tables of the Digamma and Trigamma Functions. Cambridge University Press. p. 5.
  7. ^ a b Whittaker and Watson, 12.3.
  8. ^ Whittaker and Watson, 12.31.
  9. ^ Whittaker and Watson, 12.32, example.
  10. ^ "NIST. Digital Library of Mathematical Functions (DLMF), 5.9".
  11. ^ a b c d Mező, István; Hoffman, Michael E. (2017). "Zeros of the digamma function and its Barnes G-function analogue". Integral Transforms and Special Functions. 28 (11): 846–858. doi:10.1080/10652469.2017.1376193. S2CID 126115156.
  12. ^ Nörlund, N. E. (1924). Vorlesungen über Differenzenrechnung. Berlin: Springer.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Blagouchine, Ia. V. (2018). "Three Notes on Ser's and Hasse's Representations for the Zeta-functions" (PDF). INTEGERS: The Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory. 18A: 1–45. arXiv:1606.02044. Bibcode:2016arXiv160602044B.
  14. ^ a b Blagouchine, Ia. V. (2016). "Two series expansions for the logarithm of the gamma function involving Stirling numbers and containing only rational coefficients for certain arguments related to π−1". Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications. 442: 404–434. arXiv:1408.3902. Bibcode:2014arXiv1408.3902B. doi:10.1016/J.JMAA.2016.04.032. S2CID 119661147.
  15. ^ R. Campbell. Les intégrales eulériennes et leurs applications, Dunod, Paris, 1966.
  16. ^ H.M. Srivastava and J. Choi. Series Associated with the Zeta and Related Functions, Kluwer Academic Publishers, the Netherlands, 2001.
  17. ^ Blagouchine, Iaroslav V. (2014). "A theorem for the closed-form evaluation of the first generalized Stieltjes constant at rational arguments and some related summations". Journal of Number Theory. 148: 537–592. arXiv:1401.3724. doi:10.1016/j.jnt.2014.08.009.
  18. ^ Classical topi s in complex function theorey. p. 46.
  19. ^ Choi, Junesang; Cvijovic, Djurdje (2007). "Values of the polygamma functions at rational arguments". Journal of Physics A. 40 (50): 15019. Bibcode:2007JPhA...4015019C. doi:10.1088/1751-8113/40/50/007. S2CID 118527596.
  20. ^ Bernardo, José M. (1976). "Algorithm AS 103 psi(digamma function) computation" (PDF). Applied Statistics. 25: 315–317. doi:10.2307/2347257. JSTOR 2347257.
  21. ^ Alzer, Horst (1997). "On Some Inequalities for the Gamma and Psi Functions" (PDF). Mathematics of Computation. 66 (217): 373–389. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-97-00807-7. JSTOR 2153660.
  22. ^ Elezović, Neven; Giordano, Carla; Pečarić, Josip (2000). "The best bounds in Gautschi's inequality". Mathematical Inequalities & Applications (2): 239–252. doi:10.7153/MIA-03-26.
  23. ^ Guo, Bai-Ni; Qi, Feng (2014). "Sharp inequalities for the psi function and harmonic numbers". Analysis. 34 (2). arXiv:0902.2524. doi:10.1515/anly-2014-0001. S2CID 16909853.
  24. ^ Laforgia, Andrea; Natalini, Pierpaolo (2013). "Exponential, gamma and polygamma functions: Simple proofs of classical and new inequalities". Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications. 407 (2): 495–504. doi:10.1016/j.jmaa.2013.05.045.
  25. ^ Alzer, Horst; Jameson, Graham (2017). "A harmonic mean inequality for the digamma function and related results" (PDF). Rendiconti del Seminario Matematico della Università di Padova. 70 (201): 203–209. doi:10.4171/RSMUP/137-10. ISSN 0041-8994. LCCN 50046633. OCLC 01761704. S2CID 41966777.
  26. ^ Beal, Matthew J. (2003). Variational Algorithms for Approximate Bayesian Inference (PDF) (PhD thesis). The Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit, University College London. pp. 265–266.
  27. ^ If it converged to a function f(y) then ln(f(y) / y) would have the same Maclaurin series as ln(1 / y) − φ(1 / y). But this does not converge because the series given earlier for φ(x) does not converge.
  28. ^ Hermite, Charles (1881). "Sur l'intégrale Eulérienne de seconde espéce". Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (90): 332–338. doi:10.1515/crll.1881.90.332. S2CID 118866486.

External links

  • OEIS sequence A020759 (Decimal expansion of (-1)*Gamma'(1/2)/Gamma(1/2) where Gamma(x) denotes the Gamma function)—psi(1/2)
OEISA047787 psi(1/3), OEISA200064 psi(2/3), OEISA020777 psi(1/4), OEISA200134 psi(3/4), OEISA200135 to OEISA200138 psi(1/5) to psi(4/5).

digamma, function, barnes, gamma, function, variables, double, gamma, function, mathematics, digamma, function, defined, logarithmic, derivative, gamma, function, digamma, function, displaystyle, visualized, using, domain, coloring, real, part, plots, digamma,. For Barnes gamma function of two variables see double gamma function In mathematics the digamma function is defined as the logarithmic derivative of the gamma function 1 2 3 The digamma function ps z displaystyle psi z visualized using domain coloring Real part plots of the digamma and the next three polygamma functions along the real line ps z d d z ln G z G z G z displaystyle psi z frac mathrm d mathrm d z ln Gamma z frac Gamma z Gamma z It is the first of the polygamma functions This function is strictly increasing and strictly concave on 0 displaystyle 0 infty 4 and it asymptotically behaves as 5 ps z ln z 1 2 z displaystyle psi z sim ln z frac 1 2z for large arguments z displaystyle z rightarrow infty in the sector arg z lt p e displaystyle arg z lt pi varepsilon with some infinitesimally small positive constant e displaystyle varepsilon The digamma function is often denoted as ps 0 x ps 0 x displaystyle psi 0 x psi 0 x or Ϝ 6 the uppercase form of the archaic Greek consonant digamma meaning double gamma Contents 1 Relation to harmonic numbers 2 Integral representations 3 Infinite product representation 4 Series representation 4 1 Series formula 4 1 1 Evaluation of sums of rational functions 4 2 Taylor series 4 3 Newton series 4 4 Series with Gregory s coefficients Cauchy numbers and Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind 5 Reflection formula 6 Recurrence formula and characterization 7 Some finite sums involving the digamma function 8 Gauss s digamma theorem 9 Asymptotic expansion 10 Inequalities 11 Computation and approximation 12 Special values 13 Roots of the digamma function 14 Regularization 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksRelation to harmonic numbers EditThe gamma function obeys the equation G z 1 z G z displaystyle Gamma z 1 z Gamma z Taking the derivative with respect to z gives G z 1 z G z G z displaystyle Gamma z 1 z Gamma z Gamma z Dividing by G z 1 or the equivalent zG z gives G z 1 G z 1 G z G z 1 z displaystyle frac Gamma z 1 Gamma z 1 frac Gamma z Gamma z frac 1 z or ps z 1 ps z 1 z displaystyle psi z 1 psi z frac 1 z Since the harmonic numbers are defined for positive integers n as H n k 1 n 1 k displaystyle H n sum k 1 n frac 1 k the digamma function is related to them by ps n H n 1 g displaystyle psi n H n 1 gamma where H0 0 and g is the Euler Mascheroni constant For half integer arguments the digamma function takes the values ps n 1 2 g 2 ln 2 k 1 n 2 2 k 1 displaystyle psi left n tfrac 1 2 right gamma 2 ln 2 sum k 1 n frac 2 2k 1 Integral representations EditIf the real part of z is positive then the digamma function has the following integral representation due to Gauss 7 ps z 0 e t t e z t 1 e t d t displaystyle psi z int 0 infty left frac e t t frac e zt 1 e t right dt Combining this expression with an integral identity for the Euler Mascheroni constant g displaystyle gamma gives ps z 1 g 0 1 1 t z 1 t d t displaystyle psi z 1 gamma int 0 1 left frac 1 t z 1 t right dt The integral is Euler s harmonic number H z displaystyle H z so the previous formula may also be written ps z 1 ps 1 H z displaystyle psi z 1 psi 1 H z A consequence is the following generalization of the recurrence relation ps w 1 ps z 1 H w H z displaystyle psi w 1 psi z 1 H w H z An integral representation due to Dirichlet is 7 ps z 0 e t 1 1 t z d t t displaystyle psi z int 0 infty left e t frac 1 1 t z right frac dt t Gauss s integral representation can be manipulated to give the start of the asymptotic expansion of ps displaystyle psi 8 ps z log z 1 2 z 0 1 2 1 t 1 e t 1 e t z d t displaystyle psi z log z frac 1 2z int 0 infty left frac 1 2 frac 1 t frac 1 e t 1 right e tz dt This formula is also a consequence of Binet s first integral for the gamma function The integral may be recognized as a Laplace transform Binet s second integral for the gamma function gives a different formula for ps displaystyle psi which also gives the first few terms of the asymptotic expansion 9 ps z log z 1 2 z 2 0 t d t t 2 z 2 e 2 p t 1 displaystyle psi z log z frac 1 2z 2 int 0 infty frac t dt t 2 z 2 e 2 pi t 1 From the definition of ps displaystyle psi and the integral representation of the gamma function one obtains ps z 1 G z 0 t z 1 ln t e t d t displaystyle psi z frac 1 Gamma z int 0 infty t z 1 ln t e t dt with ℜ z gt 0 displaystyle Re z gt 0 10 Infinite product representation EditThe function ps z G z displaystyle psi z Gamma z is an entire function 11 and it can be represented by the infinite product ps z G z e 2 g z k 0 1 z x k e z x k displaystyle frac psi z Gamma z e 2 gamma z prod k 0 infty left 1 frac z x k right e frac z x k Here x k displaystyle x k is the kth zero of ps displaystyle psi see below and g displaystyle gamma is the Euler Mascheroni constant Note This is also equal to d d z 1 G z displaystyle frac d dz frac 1 Gamma z due to the definition of the digamma function G z G z ps z displaystyle frac Gamma z Gamma z psi z Series representation EditSeries formula Edit Euler s product formula for the gamma function combined with the functional equation and an identity for the Euler Mascheroni constant yields the following expression for the digamma function valid in the complex plane outside the negative integers Abramowitz and Stegun 6 3 16 1 ps z 1 g n 1 1 n 1 n z z 1 2 3 g n 1 z n n z z 1 2 3 displaystyle begin aligned psi z 1 amp gamma sum n 1 infty left frac 1 n frac 1 n z right qquad z neq 1 2 3 ldots amp gamma sum n 1 infty left frac z n n z right qquad z neq 1 2 3 ldots end aligned Equivalently ps z g n 0 1 n 1 1 n z z 0 1 2 g n 0 z 1 n 1 n z z 0 1 2 displaystyle begin aligned psi z amp gamma sum n 0 infty left frac 1 n 1 frac 1 n z right qquad z neq 0 1 2 ldots amp gamma sum n 0 infty frac z 1 n 1 n z qquad z neq 0 1 2 ldots end aligned Evaluation of sums of rational functions Edit The above identity can be used to evaluate sums of the form n 0 u n n 0 p n q n displaystyle sum n 0 infty u n sum n 0 infty frac p n q n where p n and q n are polynomials of n Performing partial fraction on un in the complex field in the case when all roots of q n are simple roots u n p n q n k 1 m a k n b k displaystyle u n frac p n q n sum k 1 m frac a k n b k For the series to converge lim n n u n 0 displaystyle lim n to infty nu n 0 otherwise the series will be greater than the harmonic series and thus diverge Hence k 1 m a k 0 displaystyle sum k 1 m a k 0 and n 0 u n n 0 k 1 m a k n b k n 0 k 1 m a k 1 n b k 1 n 1 k 1 m a k n 0 1 n b k 1 n 1 k 1 m a k ps b k g k 1 m a k ps b k displaystyle begin aligned sum n 0 infty u n amp sum n 0 infty sum k 1 m frac a k n b k amp sum n 0 infty sum k 1 m a k left frac 1 n b k frac 1 n 1 right amp sum k 1 m left a k sum n 0 infty left frac 1 n b k frac 1 n 1 right right amp sum k 1 m a k big psi b k gamma big amp sum k 1 m a k psi b k end aligned With the series expansion of higher rank polygamma function a generalized formula can be given as n 0 u n n 0 k 1 m a k n b k r k k 1 m 1 r k r k 1 a k ps r k 1 b k displaystyle sum n 0 infty u n sum n 0 infty sum k 1 m frac a k n b k r k sum k 1 m frac 1 r k r k 1 a k psi r k 1 b k provided the series on the left converges Taylor series Edit The digamma has a rational zeta series given by the Taylor series at z 1 This is ps z 1 g k 1 z k 1 z k displaystyle psi z 1 gamma sum k 1 infty zeta k 1 z k which converges for z lt 1 Here z n is the Riemann zeta function This series is easily derived from the corresponding Taylor s series for the Hurwitz zeta function Newton series Edit The Newton series for the digamma sometimes referred to as Stern series 12 13 reads ps s 1 g k 1 1 k k s k displaystyle psi s 1 gamma sum k 1 infty frac 1 k k binom s k where sk is the binomial coefficient It may also be generalized to ps s 1 g 1 m k 1 m 1 m k s k 1 m k 1 1 k k s m k 1 s k 1 ℜ s gt 1 displaystyle psi s 1 gamma frac 1 m sum k 1 m 1 frac m k s k frac 1 m sum k 1 infty frac 1 k k left binom s m k 1 binom s k 1 right qquad Re s gt 1 where m 2 3 4 13 Series with Gregory s coefficients Cauchy numbers and Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind Edit There exist various series for the digamma containing rational coefficients only for the rational arguments In particular the series with Gregory s coefficients Gn is ps v ln v n 1 G n n 1 v n ℜ v gt 0 displaystyle psi v ln v sum n 1 infty frac big G n big n 1 v n qquad Re v gt 0 ps v 2 ln G v 2 v ln v 2 v 2 ln v ln 2 p 2 n 1 G n 2 v n n 1 ℜ v gt 0 displaystyle psi v 2 ln Gamma v 2v ln v 2v 2 ln v ln 2 pi 2 sum n 1 infty frac big G n 2 big v n n 1 qquad Re v gt 0 ps v 3 ln G v 6 z 1 v 3 v 2 ln v 3 2 v 2 6 v ln v 3 v 3 ln v 3 2 ln 2 p 1 2 3 n 1 G n 3 v n n 1 ℜ v gt 0 displaystyle psi v 3 ln Gamma v 6 zeta 1 v 3v 2 ln v frac 3 2 v 2 6v ln v 3v 3 ln v frac 3 2 ln 2 pi frac 1 2 3 sum n 1 infty frac big G n 3 big v n n 1 qquad Re v gt 0 where v n is the rising factorial v n v v 1 v 2 v n 1 Gn k are the Gregory coefficients of higher order with Gn 1 Gn G is the gamma function and z is the Hurwitz zeta function 14 13 Similar series with the Cauchy numbers of the second kind Cn reads 14 13 ps v ln v 1 n 1 C n n 1 v n ℜ v gt 1 displaystyle psi v ln v 1 sum n 1 infty frac C n n 1 v n qquad Re v gt 1 A series with the Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind has the following form 13 ps v ln v a n 1 1 n ps n a n 1 v n ℜ v gt a displaystyle psi v ln v a sum n 1 infty frac 1 n psi n a n 1 v n qquad Re v gt a where psn a are the Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind defined by the generating equation z 1 z a ln 1 z n 0 z n ps n a z lt 1 displaystyle frac z 1 z a ln 1 z sum n 0 infty z n psi n a qquad z lt 1 It may be generalized to ps v 1 r l 0 r 1 ln v a l 1 r n 1 1 n N n r a n 1 v n ℜ v gt a r 1 2 3 displaystyle psi v frac 1 r sum l 0 r 1 ln v a l frac 1 r sum n 1 infty frac 1 n N n r a n 1 v n qquad Re v gt a quad r 1 2 3 ldots where the polynomials Nn r a are given by the following generating equation 1 z a m 1 z a ln 1 z n 0 N n m a z n z lt 1 displaystyle frac 1 z a m 1 z a ln 1 z sum n 0 infty N n m a z n qquad z lt 1 so that Nn 1 a psn a 13 Similar expressions with the logarithm of the gamma function involve these formulas 13 ps v 1 v a 1 2 ln G v a v 1 2 ln 2 p 1 2 n 1 1 n ps n 1 a v n n 1 ℜ v gt a displaystyle psi v frac 1 v a tfrac 1 2 left ln Gamma v a v frac 1 2 ln 2 pi frac 1 2 sum n 1 infty frac 1 n psi n 1 a v n n 1 right qquad Re v gt a and ps v 1 1 2 r v a 1 ln G v a v 1 2 ln 2 p 1 2 1 r n 0 r 2 r n 1 ln v a n 1 r n 1 1 n N n 1 r a v n n 1 displaystyle psi v frac 1 tfrac 1 2 r v a 1 left ln Gamma v a v frac 1 2 ln 2 pi frac 1 2 frac 1 r sum n 0 r 2 r n 1 ln v a n frac 1 r sum n 1 infty frac 1 n N n 1 r a v n n 1 right where ℜ v gt a displaystyle Re v gt a and r 2 3 4 displaystyle r 2 3 4 ldots Reflection formula EditThe digamma function satisfies a reflection formula similar to that of the gamma function ps 1 x ps x p cot p x displaystyle psi 1 x psi x pi cot pi x Recurrence formula and characterization EditThe digamma function satisfies the recurrence relation ps x 1 ps x 1 x displaystyle psi x 1 psi x frac 1 x Thus it can be said to telescope 1 x for one has D ps x 1 x displaystyle Delta psi x frac 1 x where D is the forward difference operator This satisfies the recurrence relation of a partial sum of the harmonic series thus implying the formula ps n H n 1 g displaystyle psi n H n 1 gamma where g is the Euler Mascheroni constant More generally one has ps 1 z g k 1 1 k 1 z k displaystyle psi 1 z gamma sum k 1 infty left frac 1 k frac 1 z k right for R e z gt 0 displaystyle mathrm Re z gt 0 Another series expansion is ps 1 z ln z 1 2 z j 1 B 2 j 2 j z 2 j displaystyle psi 1 z ln z frac 1 2z displaystyle sum j 1 infty frac B 2j 2jz 2j where B 2 j displaystyle B 2j are the Bernoulli numbers This series diverges for all z and is known as the Stirling series Actually ps is the only solution of the functional equation F x 1 F x 1 x displaystyle F x 1 F x frac 1 x that is monotonic on R and satisfies F 1 g This fact follows immediately from the uniqueness of the G function given its recurrence equation and convexity restriction This implies the useful difference equation ps x N ps x k 0 N 1 1 x k displaystyle psi x N psi x sum k 0 N 1 frac 1 x k Some finite sums involving the digamma function EditThere are numerous finite summation formulas for the digamma function Basic summation formulas such as r 1 m ps r m m g ln m displaystyle sum r 1 m psi left frac r m right m gamma ln m r 1 m ps r m exp 2 p r k i m m ln 1 exp 2 p k i m k Z m N k m displaystyle sum r 1 m psi left frac r m right cdot exp dfrac 2 pi rki m m ln left 1 exp frac 2 pi ki m right qquad k in mathbb Z quad m in mathbb N k neq m r 1 m 1 ps r m cos 2 p r k m m ln 2 sin k p m g k 1 2 m 1 displaystyle sum r 1 m 1 psi left frac r m right cdot cos dfrac 2 pi rk m m ln left 2 sin frac k pi m right gamma qquad k 1 2 ldots m 1 r 1 m 1 ps r m sin 2 p r k m p 2 2 k m k 1 2 m 1 displaystyle sum r 1 m 1 psi left frac r m right cdot sin frac 2 pi rk m frac pi 2 2k m qquad k 1 2 ldots m 1 are due to Gauss 15 16 More complicated formulas such as r 0 m 1 ps 2 r 1 2 m cos 2 r 1 k p m m ln tan p k 2 m k 1 2 m 1 displaystyle sum r 0 m 1 psi left frac 2r 1 2m right cdot cos frac 2r 1 k pi m m ln left tan frac pi k 2m right qquad k 1 2 ldots m 1 r 0 m 1 ps 2 r 1 2 m sin 2 r 1 k p m p m 2 k 1 2 m 1 displaystyle sum r 0 m 1 psi left frac 2r 1 2m right cdot sin dfrac 2r 1 k pi m frac pi m 2 qquad k 1 2 ldots m 1 r 1 m 1 ps r m cot p r m p m 1 m 2 6 displaystyle sum r 1 m 1 psi left frac r m right cdot cot frac pi r m frac pi m 1 m 2 6 r 1 m 1 ps r m r m g 2 m 1 m 2 ln m p 2 r 1 m 1 r m cot p r m displaystyle sum r 1 m 1 psi left frac r m right cdot frac r m frac gamma 2 m 1 frac m 2 ln m frac pi 2 sum r 1 m 1 frac r m cdot cot frac pi r m r 1 m 1 ps r m cos 2 ℓ 1 p r m p m r 1 m 1 r sin 2 p r m cos 2 p r m cos 2 ℓ 1 p m ℓ Z displaystyle sum r 1 m 1 psi left frac r m right cdot cos dfrac 2 ell 1 pi r m frac pi m sum r 1 m 1 frac r cdot sin dfrac 2 pi r m cos dfrac 2 pi r m cos dfrac 2 ell 1 pi m qquad ell in mathbb Z r 1 m 1 ps r m sin 2 ℓ 1 p r m g ln 2 m cot 2 ℓ 1 p 2 m sin 2 ℓ 1 p m r 1 m 1 ln sin p r m cos 2 p r m cos 2 ℓ 1 p m ℓ Z displaystyle sum r 1 m 1 psi left frac r m right cdot sin dfrac 2 ell 1 pi r m gamma ln 2m cot frac 2 ell 1 pi 2m sin dfrac 2 ell 1 pi m sum r 1 m 1 frac ln sin dfrac pi r m cos dfrac 2 pi r m cos dfrac 2 ell 1 pi m qquad ell in mathbb Z r 1 m 1 ps 2 r m m 1 g 2 m 2 g ln 4 m ln m m m 1 ln 2 2 p 2 m 2 3 m 2 12 m ℓ 1 m 1 ln 2 sin p ℓ m displaystyle sum r 1 m 1 psi 2 left frac r m right m 1 gamma 2 m 2 gamma ln 4m ln m m m 1 ln 2 2 frac pi 2 m 2 3m 2 12 m sum ell 1 m 1 ln 2 sin frac pi ell m are due to works of certain modern authors see e g Appendix B in Blagouchine 2014 17 We also have 18 1 1 2 1 3 1 k 1 g 1 k n 0 k 1 ps 1 n k k 2 3 displaystyle 1 frac 1 2 frac 1 3 frac 1 k 1 gamma frac 1 k sum n 0 k 1 psi left 1 frac n k right k 2 3 Gauss s digamma theorem EditFor positive integers r and m r lt m the digamma function may be expressed in terms of Euler s constant and a finite number of elementary functions 19 ps r m g ln 2 m p 2 cot r p m 2 n 1 m 1 2 cos 2 p n r m ln sin p n m displaystyle psi left frac r m right gamma ln 2m frac pi 2 cot left frac r pi m right 2 sum n 1 left lfloor frac m 1 2 right rfloor cos left frac 2 pi nr m right ln sin left frac pi n m right which holds because of its recurrence equation for all rational arguments Asymptotic expansion EditThe digamma function has the asymptotic expansion ps z ln z n 1 z 1 n z n ln z n 1 B n n z n displaystyle psi z sim ln z sum n 1 infty frac zeta 1 n z n ln z sum n 1 infty frac B n nz n where Bk is the k th Bernoulli number and z is the Riemann zeta function The first few terms of this expansion are ps z ln z 1 2 z 1 12 z 2 1 120 z 4 1 252 z 6 1 240 z 8 1 132 z 10 691 32760 z 12 1 12 z 14 displaystyle psi z approx ln z frac 1 2z frac 1 12z 2 frac 1 120z 4 frac 1 252z 6 frac 1 240z 8 frac 1 132z 10 frac 691 32760z 12 frac 1 12z 14 cdots Although the infinite sum does not converge for any z any finite partial sum becomes increasingly accurate as z increases The expansion can be found by applying the Euler Maclaurin formula to the sum 20 n 1 1 n 1 z n displaystyle sum n 1 infty left frac 1 n frac 1 z n right The expansion can also be derived from the integral representation coming from Binet s second integral formula for the gamma function Expanding t t 2 z 2 displaystyle t t 2 z 2 as a geometric series and substituting an integral representation of the Bernoulli numbers leads to the same asymptotic series as above Furthermore expanding only finitely many terms of the series gives a formula with an explicit error term ps z ln z 1 2 z n 1 N B 2 n 2 n z 2 n 1 N 1 2 z 2 N 0 t 2 N 1 d t t 2 z 2 e 2 p t 1 displaystyle psi z ln z frac 1 2z sum n 1 N frac B 2n 2nz 2n 1 N 1 frac 2 z 2N int 0 infty frac t 2N 1 dt t 2 z 2 e 2 pi t 1 Inequalities EditWhen x gt 0 the function log x 1 2 x ps x displaystyle log x frac 1 2x psi x is completely monotonic and in particular positive This is a consequence of Bernstein s theorem on monotone functions applied to the integral representation coming from Binet s first integral for the gamma function Additionally by the convexity inequality 1 t e t displaystyle 1 t leq e t the integrand in this representation is bounded above by e t z 2 displaystyle e tz 2 Consequently 1 x log x ps x displaystyle frac 1 x log x psi x is also completely monotonic It follows that for all x gt 0 log x 1 x ps x log x 1 2 x displaystyle log x frac 1 x leq psi x leq log x frac 1 2x This recovers a theorem of Horst Alzer 21 Alzer also proved that for s 0 1 1 s x s lt ps x 1 ps x s displaystyle frac 1 s x s lt psi x 1 psi x s Related bounds were obtained by Elezovic Giordano and Pecaric who proved that for x gt 0 log x 1 2 1 x lt ps x lt log x e g 1 x displaystyle log x tfrac 1 2 frac 1 x lt psi x lt log x e gamma frac 1 x where g ps 1 displaystyle gamma psi 1 is the Euler Mascheroni constant 22 The constants 0 5 displaystyle 0 5 and e g 0 56 displaystyle e gamma approx 0 56 appearing in these bounds are the best possible 23 The mean value theorem implies the following analog of Gautschi s inequality If x gt c where c 1 461 is the unique positive real root of the digamma function and if s gt 0 then exp 1 s ps x 1 ps x 1 ps x 1 ps x s exp 1 s ps x s ps x s displaystyle exp left 1 s frac psi x 1 psi x 1 right leq frac psi x 1 psi x s leq exp left 1 s frac psi x s psi x s right Moreover equality holds if and only if s 1 24 Inspired by the harmonic mean value inequality for the classical gamma function Horzt Alzer and Graham Jameson proved among other things a harmonic mean value inequality for the digamma function g 2 ps x ps 1 x ps x ps 1 x displaystyle gamma leq frac 2 psi x psi frac 1 x psi x psi frac 1 x for x gt 0 displaystyle x gt 0 Equality holds if and only if x 1 displaystyle x 1 25 Computation and approximation EditThe asymptotic expansion gives an easy way to compute ps x when the real part of x is large To compute ps x for small x the recurrence relation ps x 1 1 x ps x displaystyle psi x 1 frac 1 x psi x can be used to shift the value of x to a higher value Beal 26 suggests using the above recurrence to shift x to a value greater than 6 and then applying the above expansion with terms above x14 cut off which yields more than enough precision at least 12 digits except near the zeroes As x goes to infinity ps x gets arbitrarily close to both ln x 1 2 and ln x Going down from x 1 to x ps decreases by 1 x ln x 1 2 decreases by ln x 1 2 x 1 2 which is more than 1 x and ln x decreases by ln 1 1 x which is less than 1 x From this we see that for any positive x greater than 1 2 ps x ln x 1 2 ln x displaystyle psi x in left ln left x tfrac 1 2 right ln x right or for any positive x exp ps x x 1 2 x displaystyle exp psi x in left x tfrac 1 2 x right The exponential exp ps x is approximately x 1 2 for large x but gets closer to x at small x approaching 0 at x 0 For x lt 1 we can calculate limits based on the fact that between 1 and 2 ps x g 1 g so ps x 1 x g 1 1 x g x 0 1 displaystyle psi x in left frac 1 x gamma 1 frac 1 x gamma right quad x in 0 1 or exp ps x exp 1 x g e exp 1 x g displaystyle exp psi x in left exp left frac 1 x gamma right e exp left frac 1 x gamma right right From the above asymptotic series for ps one can derive an asymptotic series for exp ps x The series matches the overall behaviour well that is it behaves asymptotically as it should for large arguments and has a zero of unbounded multiplicity at the origin too 1 exp ps x 1 x 1 2 x 2 5 4 3 x 3 3 2 4 x 4 47 48 5 x 5 5 16 6 x 6 displaystyle frac 1 exp psi x sim frac 1 x frac 1 2 cdot x 2 frac 5 4 cdot 3 cdot x 3 frac 3 2 cdot 4 cdot x 4 frac 47 48 cdot 5 cdot x 5 frac 5 16 cdot 6 cdot x 6 cdots This is similar to a Taylor expansion of exp ps 1 y at y 0 but it does not converge 27 The function is not analytic at infinity A similar series exists for exp ps x which starts with exp ps x x 1 2 displaystyle exp psi x sim x frac 1 2 If one calculates the asymptotic series for ps x 1 2 it turns out that there are no odd powers of x there is no x 1 term This leads to the following asymptotic expansion which saves computing terms of even order exp ps x 1 2 x 1 4 x 37 8 6 x 3 10313 72 8 x 5 5509121 384 10 x 7 displaystyle exp psi left x tfrac 1 2 right sim x frac 1 4 cdot x frac 37 8 cdot 6 cdot x 3 frac 10313 72 cdot 8 cdot x 5 frac 5509121 384 cdot 10 cdot x 7 cdots Special values EditThe digamma function has values in closed form for rational numbers as a result of Gauss s digamma theorem Some are listed below ps 1 g ps 1 2 2 ln 2 g ps 1 3 p 2 3 3 ln 3 2 g ps 1 4 p 2 3 ln 2 g ps 1 6 p 3 2 2 ln 2 3 ln 3 2 g ps 1 8 p 2 4 ln 2 p ln 2 1 ln 2 1 2 g displaystyle begin aligned psi 1 amp gamma psi left tfrac 1 2 right amp 2 ln 2 gamma psi left tfrac 1 3 right amp frac pi 2 sqrt 3 frac 3 ln 3 2 gamma psi left tfrac 1 4 right amp frac pi 2 3 ln 2 gamma psi left tfrac 1 6 right amp frac pi sqrt 3 2 2 ln 2 frac 3 ln 3 2 gamma psi left tfrac 1 8 right amp frac pi 2 4 ln 2 frac pi ln left sqrt 2 1 right ln left sqrt 2 1 right sqrt 2 gamma end aligned Moreover by taking the logarithmic derivative of G b i 2 displaystyle Gamma bi 2 or G 1 2 b i 2 displaystyle Gamma tfrac 1 2 bi 2 where b displaystyle b is real valued it can easily be deduced that Im ps b i 1 2 b p 2 coth p b displaystyle operatorname Im psi bi frac 1 2b frac pi 2 coth pi b Im ps 1 2 b i p 2 tanh p b displaystyle operatorname Im psi tfrac 1 2 bi frac pi 2 tanh pi b Apart from Gauss s digamma theorem no such closed formula is known for the real part in general We have for example at the imaginary unit the numerical approximation Re ps i g n 0 n 1 n 3 n 2 n 1 0 09465 displaystyle operatorname Re psi i gamma sum n 0 infty frac n 1 n 3 n 2 n 1 approx 0 09465 Roots of the digamma function EditThe roots of the digamma function are the saddle points of the complex valued gamma function Thus they lie all on the real axis The only one on the positive real axis is the unique minimum of the real valued gamma function on R at x0 1 461632 144 968 362 341 26 All others occur single between the poles on the negative axis x1 0 504083 008 264 455 409 25 x2 1 573498 473 162 390 458 77 x3 2 610720 868 444 144 650 00 x4 3 635293 366 436 901 097 83 displaystyle vdots Already in 1881 Charles Hermite observed 28 that x n n 1 ln n O 1 ln n 2 displaystyle x n n frac 1 ln n O left frac 1 ln n 2 right holds asymptotically A better approximation of the location of the roots is given by x n n 1 p arctan p ln n n 2 displaystyle x n approx n frac 1 pi arctan left frac pi ln n right qquad n geq 2 and using a further term it becomes still better x n n 1 p arctan p ln n 1 8 n n 1 displaystyle x n approx n frac 1 pi arctan left frac pi ln n frac 1 8n right qquad n geq 1 which both spring off the reflection formula via 0 ps 1 x n ps x n p tan p x n displaystyle 0 psi 1 x n psi x n frac pi tan pi x n and substituting ps xn by its not convergent asymptotic expansion The correct second term of this expansion is 1 2n where the given one works well to approximate roots with small n Another improvement of Hermite s formula can be given 11 x n n 1 log n 1 2 n log n 2 O 1 n 2 log n 2 displaystyle x n n frac 1 log n frac 1 2n log n 2 O left frac 1 n 2 log n 2 right Regarding the zeros the following infinite sum identities were recently proved by Istvan Mezo and Michael Hoffman 11 n 0 1 x n 2 g 2 p 2 2 n 0 1 x n 3 4 z 3 g 3 g p 2 2 n 0 1 x n 4 g 4 p 4 9 2 3 g 2 p 2 4 g z 3 displaystyle begin aligned sum n 0 infty frac 1 x n 2 amp gamma 2 frac pi 2 2 sum n 0 infty frac 1 x n 3 amp 4 zeta 3 gamma 3 frac gamma pi 2 2 sum n 0 infty frac 1 x n 4 amp gamma 4 frac pi 4 9 frac 2 3 gamma 2 pi 2 4 gamma zeta 3 end aligned In general the function Z k n 0 1 x n k displaystyle Z k sum n 0 infty frac 1 x n k can be determined and it is studied in detail by the cited authors The following results 11 n 0 1 x n 2 x n 2 n 0 1 x n 2 x n g p 2 6 g displaystyle begin aligned sum n 0 infty frac 1 x n 2 x n amp 2 sum n 0 infty frac 1 x n 2 x n amp gamma frac pi 2 6 gamma end aligned also hold true Here g is the Euler Mascheroni constant Regularization EditThe digamma function appears in the regularization of divergent integrals 0 d x x a displaystyle int 0 infty frac dx x a this integral can be approximated by a divergent general Harmonic series but the following value can be attached to the series n 0 1 n a ps a displaystyle sum n 0 infty frac 1 n a psi a See also EditPolygamma function Trigamma function Chebyshev expansions of the digamma function in Wimp Jet 1961 Polynomial approximations to integral transforms Math Comp 15 74 174 178 doi 10 1090 S0025 5718 61 99221 3 References Edit a b Abramowitz M Stegun I A eds 1972 6 3 psi Digamma Function Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas Graphs and Mathematical Tables 10th ed New York Dover pp 258 259 NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions DLMF Chapter 5 Weisstein Eric W Digamma function MathWorld Alzer Horst Jameson Graham 2017 A harmonic mean inequality for the digamma function and related results PDF Rendiconti del Seminario Matematico della Universita di Padova 137 203 209 doi 10 4171 RSMUP 137 10 NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions DLMF 5 11 Pairman Eleanor 1919 Tables of the Digamma and Trigamma Functions Cambridge University Press p 5 a b Whittaker and Watson 12 3 Whittaker and Watson 12 31 Whittaker and Watson 12 32 example NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions DLMF 5 9 a b c d Mezo Istvan Hoffman Michael E 2017 Zeros of the digamma function and its Barnes G function analogue Integral Transforms and Special Functions 28 11 846 858 doi 10 1080 10652469 2017 1376193 S2CID 126115156 Norlund N E 1924 Vorlesungen uber Differenzenrechnung Berlin Springer a b c d e f g Blagouchine Ia V 2018 Three Notes on Ser s and Hasse s Representations for the Zeta functions PDF INTEGERS The Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory 18A 1 45 arXiv 1606 02044 Bibcode 2016arXiv160602044B a b Blagouchine Ia V 2016 Two series expansions for the logarithm of the gamma function involving Stirling numbers and containing only rational coefficients for certain arguments related to p 1 Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications 442 404 434 arXiv 1408 3902 Bibcode 2014arXiv1408 3902B doi 10 1016 J JMAA 2016 04 032 S2CID 119661147 R Campbell Les integrales euleriennes et leurs applications Dunod Paris 1966 H M Srivastava and J Choi Series Associated with the Zeta and Related Functions Kluwer Academic Publishers the Netherlands 2001 Blagouchine Iaroslav V 2014 A theorem for the closed form evaluation of the first generalized Stieltjes constant at rational arguments and some related summations Journal of Number Theory 148 537 592 arXiv 1401 3724 doi 10 1016 j jnt 2014 08 009 Classical topi s in complex function theorey p 46 Choi Junesang Cvijovic Djurdje 2007 Values of the polygamma functions at rational arguments Journal of Physics A 40 50 15019 Bibcode 2007JPhA 4015019C doi 10 1088 1751 8113 40 50 007 S2CID 118527596 Bernardo Jose M 1976 Algorithm AS 103 psi digamma function computation PDF Applied Statistics 25 315 317 doi 10 2307 2347257 JSTOR 2347257 Alzer Horst 1997 On Some Inequalities for the Gamma and Psi Functions PDF Mathematics of Computation 66 217 373 389 doi 10 1090 S0025 5718 97 00807 7 JSTOR 2153660 Elezovic Neven Giordano Carla Pecaric Josip 2000 The best bounds in Gautschi s inequality Mathematical Inequalities amp Applications 2 239 252 doi 10 7153 MIA 03 26 Guo Bai Ni Qi Feng 2014 Sharp inequalities for the psi function and harmonic numbers Analysis 34 2 arXiv 0902 2524 doi 10 1515 anly 2014 0001 S2CID 16909853 Laforgia Andrea Natalini Pierpaolo 2013 Exponential gamma and polygamma functions Simple proofs of classical and new inequalities Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications 407 2 495 504 doi 10 1016 j jmaa 2013 05 045 Alzer Horst Jameson Graham 2017 A harmonic mean inequality for the digamma function and related results PDF Rendiconti del Seminario Matematico della Universita di Padova 70 201 203 209 doi 10 4171 RSMUP 137 10 ISSN 0041 8994 LCCN 50046633 OCLC 01761704 S2CID 41966777 Beal Matthew J 2003 Variational Algorithms for Approximate Bayesian Inference PDF PhD thesis The Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit University College London pp 265 266 If it converged to a function f y then ln f y y would have the same Maclaurin series as ln 1 y f 1 y But this does not converge because the series given earlier for f x does not converge Hermite Charles 1881 Sur l integrale Eulerienne de seconde espece Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 90 332 338 doi 10 1515 crll 1881 90 332 S2CID 118866486 External links EditOEIS sequence A020759 Decimal expansion of 1 Gamma 1 2 Gamma 1 2 where Gamma x denotes the Gamma function psi 1 2 OEIS A047787 psi 1 3 OEIS A200064 psi 2 3 OEIS A020777 psi 1 4 OEIS A200134 psi 3 4 OEIS A200135 to OEIS A200138 psi 1 5 to psi 4 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Digamma function amp oldid 1152433880 Gauss s digamma theorem, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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