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Generalized hypergeometric function

In mathematics, a generalized hypergeometric series is a power series in which the ratio of successive coefficients indexed by n is a rational function of n. The series, if convergent, defines a generalized hypergeometric function, which may then be defined over a wider domain of the argument by analytic continuation. The generalized hypergeometric series is sometimes just called the hypergeometric series, though this term also sometimes just refers to the Gaussian hypergeometric series. Generalized hypergeometric functions include the (Gaussian) hypergeometric function and the confluent hypergeometric function as special cases, which in turn have many particular special functions as special cases, such as elementary functions, Bessel functions, and the classical orthogonal polynomials.

Plot of the generalized hypergeometric function pFq(a b z) with a=(2,4,6,8) and b=(2,3,5,7,11) in the complex plane from -2-2i to 2+2i created with Mathematica 13.1 function ComplexPlot3D

Notation

A hypergeometric series is formally defined as a power series

 

in which the ratio of successive coefficients is a rational function of n. That is,

 

where A(n) and B(n) are polynomials in n.

For example, in the case of the series for the exponential function,

 

we have:

 

So this satisfies the definition with A(n) = 1 and B(n) = n + 1.

It is customary to factor out the leading term, so β0 is assumed to be 1. The polynomials can be factored into linear factors of the form (aj + n) and (bk + n) respectively, where the aj and bk are complex numbers.

For historical reasons, it is assumed that (1 + n) is a factor of B. If this is not already the case then both A and B can be multiplied by this factor; the factor cancels so the terms are unchanged and there is no loss of generality.

The ratio between consecutive coefficients now has the form

 ,

where c and d are the leading coefficients of A and B. The series then has the form

 ,

or, by scaling z by the appropriate factor and rearranging,

 .

This has the form of an exponential generating function. This series is usually denoted by

 

or

 

Using the rising factorial or Pochhammer symbol

 

this can be written

 

(Note that this use of the Pochhammer symbol is not standard; however it is the standard usage in this context.)

Terminology

When all the terms of the series are defined and it has a non-zero radius of convergence, then the series defines an analytic function. Such a function, and its analytic continuations, is called the hypergeometric function.

The case when the radius of convergence is 0 yields many interesting series in mathematics, for example the incomplete gamma function has the asymptotic expansion

 

which could be written za−1e−z 2F0(1−a,1;;−z−1). However, the use of the term hypergeometric series is usually restricted to the case where the series defines an actual analytic function.

The ordinary hypergeometric series should not be confused with the basic hypergeometric series, which, despite its name, is a rather more complicated and recondite series. The "basic" series is the q-analog of the ordinary hypergeometric series. There are several such generalizations of the ordinary hypergeometric series, including the ones coming from zonal spherical functions on Riemannian symmetric spaces.

The series without the factor of n! in the denominator (summed over all integers n, including negative) is called the bilateral hypergeometric series.

Convergence conditions

There are certain values of the aj and bk for which the numerator or the denominator of the coefficients is 0.

  • If any aj is a non-positive integer (0, −1, −2, etc.) then the series only has a finite number of terms and is, in fact, a polynomial of degree −aj.
  • If any bk is a non-positive integer (excepting the previous case with bk < aj) then the denominators become 0 and the series is undefined.

Excluding these cases, the ratio test can be applied to determine the radius of convergence.

  • If p < q + 1 then the ratio of coefficients tends to zero. This implies that the series converges for any finite value of z and thus defines an entire function of z. An example is the power series for the exponential function.
  • If p = q + 1 then the ratio of coefficients tends to one. This implies that the series converges for |z| < 1 and diverges for |z| > 1. Whether it converges for |z| = 1 is more difficult to determine. Analytic continuation can be employed for larger values of z.
  • If p > q + 1 then the ratio of coefficients grows without bound. This implies that, besides z = 0, the series diverges. This is then a divergent or asymptotic series, or it can be interpreted as a symbolic shorthand for a differential equation that the sum satisfies formally.

The question of convergence for p=q+1 when z is on the unit circle is more difficult. It can be shown that the series converges absolutely at z = 1 if

 .

Further, if p=q+1,   and z is real, then the following convergence result holds Quigley et al. (2013):

 .

Basic properties

It is immediate from the definition that the order of the parameters aj, or the order of the parameters bk can be changed without changing the value of the function. Also, if any of the parameters aj is equal to any of the parameters bk, then the matching parameters can be "cancelled out", with certain exceptions when the parameters are non-positive integers. For example,

 .

This cancelling is a special case of a reduction formula that may be applied whenever a parameter on the top row differs from one on the bottom row by a non-negative integer.[1]

 

Euler's integral transform

The following basic identity is very useful as it relates the higher-order hypergeometric functions in terms of integrals over the lower order ones[2]

 

Differentiation

The generalized hypergeometric function satisfies

 

and

 

Additionally,

 

Combining these gives a differential equation satisfied by w = pFq:

 .

Contiguous function and related identities

Take the following operator:

 

From the differentiation formulas given above, the linear space spanned by

 

contains each of

 
 
 
 

Since the space has dimension 2, any three of these p+q+2 functions are linearly dependent. These dependencies can be written out to generate a large number of identities involving  .

For example, in the simplest non-trivial case,

 ,
 ,
 ,

So

 .

This, and other important examples,

 ,
 ,
 
 ,
 ,
 ,

can be used to generate continued fraction expressions known as Gauss's continued fraction.

Similarly, by applying the differentiation formulas twice, there are   such functions contained in

 

which has dimension three so any four are linearly dependent. This generates more identities and the process can be continued. The identities thus generated can be combined with each other to produce new ones in a different way.

A function obtained by adding ±1 to exactly one of the parameters aj, bk in

 

is called contiguous to

 

Using the technique outlined above, an identity relating   and its two contiguous functions can be given, six identities relating   and any two of its four contiguous functions, and fifteen identities relating   and any two of its six contiguous functions have been found. (The first one was derived in the previous paragraph. The last fifteen were given by Gauss in his 1812 paper.)

Identities

A number of other hypergeometric function identities were discovered in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. A 20th century contribution to the methodology of proving these identities is the Egorychev method.

Saalschütz's theorem

Saalschütz's theorem[3] (Saalschütz 1890) is

 

For extension of this theorem, see a research paper by Rakha & Rathie.

Dixon's identity

Dixon's identity,[4] first proved by Dixon (1902), gives the sum of a well-poised 3F2 at 1:

 

For generalization of Dixon's identity, see a paper by Lavoie, et al.

Dougall's formula

Dougall's formula (Dougall 1907) gives the sum of a very well-poised series that is terminating and 2-balanced.

 

Terminating means that m is a non-negative integer and 2-balanced means that

 

Many of the other formulas for special values of hypergeometric functions can be derived from this as special or limiting cases.

Generalization of Kummer's transformations and identities for 2F2

Identity 1.

 

where

 ;

Identity 2.

 

which links Bessel functions to 2F2; this reduces to Kummer's second formula for b = 2a:

Identity 3.

 .

Identity 4.

 

which is a finite sum if b-d is a non-negative integer.

Kummer's relation

Kummer's relation is

 

Clausen's formula

Clausen's formula

 

was used by de Branges to prove the Bieberbach conjecture.

Special cases

Many of the special functions in mathematics are special cases of the confluent hypergeometric function or the hypergeometric function; see the corresponding articles for examples.

The series 0F0

As noted earlier,  . The differential equation for this function is  , which has solutions   where k is a constant.

The series 0F1

The functions of the form   are called confluent hypergeometric limit functions and are closely related to Bessel functions.

The relationship is:

 
 

The differential equation for this function is

 

or

 

When a is not a positive integer, the substitution

 

gives a linearly independent solution

 

so the general solution is

 

where k, l are constants. (If a is a positive integer, the independent solution is given by the appropriate Bessel function of the second kind.)

A special case is:

 

The series 1F0

An important case is:

 

The differential equation for this function is

 

or

 

which has solutions

 

where k is a constant.

  is the geometric series with ratio z and coefficient 1.
  is also useful.

The series 1F1

The functions of the form   are called confluent hypergeometric functions of the first kind, also written  . The incomplete gamma function   is a special case.

The differential equation for this function is

 

or

 

When b is not a positive integer, the substitution

 

gives a linearly independent solution

 

so the general solution is

 

where k, l are constants.

When a is a non-positive integer, −n,   is a polynomial. Up to constant factors, these are the Laguerre polynomials. This implies Hermite polynomials can be expressed in terms of 1F1 as well.

The series 1F2

Relations to other functions are known for certain parameter combinations only.

The function   is the antiderivative of the cardinal sine. With modified values of   and  , one obtains the antiderivative of  .[5]

It has been proposed that   can be expressed through the Bessel function   and its derivative.[6]

The function   is essentially a Lommel function.[7]

The series 2F0

This occurs in connection with the exponential integral function Ei(z).

The series 2F1

Historically, the most important are the functions of the form  . These are sometimes called Gauss's hypergeometric functions, classical standard hypergeometric or often simply hypergeometric functions. The term Generalized hypergeometric function is used for the functions pFq if there is risk of confusion. This function was first studied in detail by Carl Friedrich Gauss, who explored the conditions for its convergence.

The differential equation for this function is

 

or

 

It is known as the hypergeometric differential equation. When c is not a positive integer, the substitution

 

gives a linearly independent solution

 

so the general solution for |z| < 1 is

 

where k, l are constants. Different solutions can be derived for other values of z. In fact there are 24 solutions, known as the Kummer solutions, derivable using various identities, valid in different regions of the complex plane.

When a is a non-positive integer, −n,

 

is a polynomial. Up to constant factors and scaling, these are the Jacobi polynomials. Several other classes of orthogonal polynomials, up to constant factors, are special cases of Jacobi polynomials, so these can be expressed using 2F1 as well. This includes Legendre polynomials and Chebyshev polynomials.

A wide range of integrals of elementary functions can be expressed using the hypergeometric function, e.g.:

 

The series 3F0

This occurs in connection with Mott polynomials.[8]

The series 3F1

This occurs in the theory of Bessel functions. It provides a way to compute Bessel functions of large arguments.

The series 3F2

The function

 

is the dilogarithm[9]

The function

 

is a Hahn polynomial.

The series 4F3

The function

 

is a Wilson polynomial.

The series q+1Fq

The functions

 
 

for   and   are the Polylogarithm.

Generalizations

The generalized hypergeometric function is linked to the Meijer G-function and the MacRobert E-function. Hypergeometric series were generalised to several variables, for example by Paul Emile Appell and Joseph Kampé de Fériet; but a comparable general theory took long to emerge. Many identities were found, some quite remarkable. A generalization, the q-series analogues, called the basic hypergeometric series, were given by Eduard Heine in the late nineteenth century. Here, the ratios considered of successive terms, instead of a rational function of n, are a rational function of qn. Another generalization, the elliptic hypergeometric series, are those series where the ratio of terms is an elliptic function (a doubly periodic meromorphic function) of n.

During the twentieth century this was a fruitful area of combinatorial mathematics, with numerous connections to other fields. There are a number of new definitions of general hypergeometric functions, by Aomoto, Israel Gelfand and others; and applications for example to the combinatorics of arranging a number of hyperplanes in complex N-space (see arrangement of hyperplanes).

Special hypergeometric functions occur as zonal spherical functions on Riemannian symmetric spaces and semi-simple Lie groups. Their importance and role can be understood through the following example: the hypergeometric series 2F1 has the Legendre polynomials as a special case, and when considered in the form of spherical harmonics, these polynomials reflect, in a certain sense, the symmetry properties of the two-sphere or, equivalently, the rotations given by the Lie group SO(3). In tensor product decompositions of concrete representations of this group Clebsch–Gordan coefficients are met, which can be written as 3F2 hypergeometric series.

Bilateral hypergeometric series are a generalization of hypergeometric functions where one sums over all integers, not just the positive ones.

Fox–Wright functions are a generalization of generalized hypergeometric functions where the Pochhammer symbols in the series expression are generalised to gamma functions of linear expressions in the index n.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Prudnikov, A. P.; Brychkov, Yu. A.; Marichev, O. I. (1990). Integrals & Series Volume 3: More Special Functions. Gordon and Breach. p. 439.
  2. ^ (Slater 1966, Equation (4.1.2))
  3. ^ See (Slater 1966, Section 2.3.1) or (Bailey 1935, Section 2.2) for a proof.
  4. ^ See (Bailey 1935, Section 3.1) for a detailed proof. An alternative proof is in (Slater 1966, Section 2.3.3)
  5. ^ Victor Nijimbere, Ural Math J vol 3(1) and https://arxiv.org/abs/1703.01907 (2017)
  6. ^ https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/3978473 (2021)
  7. ^ Watson's "Treatise on the Theory of Bessel functions" (1966), Section 10.7, Equation (10), according to https://mathoverflow.net/questions/98684
  8. ^ See Erdélyi et al. 1955.
  9. ^ Candan, Cagatay. "A Simple Proof of F(1,1,1;2,2;x)=dilog(1-x)/x" (PDF).

References

  • Askey, R. A.; Daalhuis, Adri B. Olde (2010), "Generalized hypergeometric function", in Olver, Frank W. J.; Lozier, Daniel M.; Boisvert, Ronald F.; Clark, Charles W. (eds.), NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-19225-5, MR 2723248.
  • Andrews, George E.; Askey, Richard & Roy, Ranjan (1999). Special functions. Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications. Vol. 71. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-78988-2. MR 1688958.
  • Bailey, W.N. (1935). Generalized Hypergeometric Series. Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics. Vol. 32. London: Cambridge University Press. Zbl 0011.02303.
  • Dixon, A.C. (1902). "Summation of a certain series". Proc. London Math. Soc. 35 (1): 284–291. doi:10.1112/plms/s1-35.1.284. JFM 34.0490.02.
  • Dougall, J. (1907). "On Vandermonde's theorem and some more general expansions". Proc. Edinburgh Math. Soc. 25: 114–132. doi:10.1017/S0013091500033642.
  • Erdélyi, Arthur; Magnus, Wilhelm; Oberhettinger, Fritz; Tricomi, Francesco G. (1955). Higher transcendental functions. Vol. III. McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., New York-Toronto-London. MR 0066496.
  • Gasper, George; Rahman, Mizan (2004). Basic Hypergeometric Series. Encyclopedia of Mathematics and Its Applications. Vol. 96 (2nd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83357-8. MR 2128719. Zbl 1129.33005. (the first edition has ISBN 0-521-35049-2)
  • Gauss, Carl Friedrich (1813). "Disquisitiones generales circa seriam infinitam    ". Commentationes Societatis Regiae Scientarum Gottingensis Recentiores (in Latin). Göttingen. 2. (a reprint of this paper can be found in Carl Friedrich Gauss, Werke, p. 125)
  • Grinshpan, A. Z. (2013), "Generalized hypergeometric functions: product identities and weighted norm inequalities", The Ramanujan Journal, 31 (1–2): 53–66, doi:10.1007/s11139-013-9487-x, S2CID 121054930
  • Heckman, Gerrit & Schlichtkrull, Henrik (1994). Harmonic Analysis and Special Functions on Symmetric Spaces. San Diego: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-336170-7. (part 1 treats hypergeometric functions on Lie groups)
  • Lavoie, J.L.; Grondin, F.; Rathie, A.K.; Arora, K. (1994). "Generalizations of Dixon's theorem on the sum of a 3F2". Math. Comp. 62 (205): 267–276. doi:10.2307/2153407. JSTOR 2153407.
  • Miller, A. R.; Paris, R. B. (2011). "Euler-type transformations for the generalized hypergeometric function r+2Fr+1". Z. Angew. Math. Phys. 62 (1): 31–45. Bibcode:2011ZaMP...62...31M. doi:10.1007/s00033-010-0085-0. S2CID 30484300.
  • Quigley, J.; Wilson, K.J.; Walls, L.; Bedford, T. (2013). "A Bayes linear Bayes Method for Estimation of Correlated Event Rates" (PDF). Risk Analysis. 33 (12): 2209–2224. doi:10.1111/risa.12035. PMID 23551053. S2CID 24476762.
  • Rathie, Arjun K.; Pogány, Tibor K. (2008). "New summation formula for 3F2(1/2) and a Kummer-type II transformation of 2F2(x)". Mathematical Communications. 13: 63–66. MR 2422088. Zbl 1146.33002.
  • Rakha, M.A.; Rathie, Arjun K. (2011). "Extensions of Euler's type- II transformation and Saalschutz's theorem". Bull. Korean Math. Soc. 48 (1): 151–156. doi:10.4134/bkms.2011.48.1.151.
  • Saalschütz, L. (1890). "Eine Summationsformel". Zeitschrift für Mathematik und Physik (in German). 35: 186–188. JFM 22.0262.03.
  • Slater, Lucy Joan (1966). Generalized Hypergeometric Functions. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-06483-5. MR 0201688. Zbl 0135.28101. (there is a 2008 paperback with ISBN 978-0-521-09061-2)
  • Yoshida, Masaaki (1997). Hypergeometric Functions, My Love: Modular Interpretations of Configuration Spaces. Braunschweig/Wiesbaden: Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn. ISBN 978-3-528-06925-4. MR 1453580.

External links

generalized, hypergeometric, function, other, generalizations, hypergeometric, function, hypergeometric, function, confused, with, general, hypergeometric, function, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, mathematics, generalized, hypergeometric, series. For other generalizations of the hypergeometric function see hypergeometric function Not to be confused with general hypergeometric function PFq redirects here For other uses see PFQ disambiguation In mathematics a generalized hypergeometric series is a power series in which the ratio of successive coefficients indexed by n is a rational function of n The series if convergent defines a generalized hypergeometric function which may then be defined over a wider domain of the argument by analytic continuation The generalized hypergeometric series is sometimes just called the hypergeometric series though this term also sometimes just refers to the Gaussian hypergeometric series Generalized hypergeometric functions include the Gaussian hypergeometric function and the confluent hypergeometric function as special cases which in turn have many particular special functions as special cases such as elementary functions Bessel functions and the classical orthogonal polynomials Plot of the generalized hypergeometric function pFq a b z with a 2 4 6 8 and b 2 3 5 7 11 in the complex plane from 2 2i to 2 2i created with Mathematica 13 1 function ComplexPlot3D Contents 1 Notation 2 Terminology 3 Convergence conditions 4 Basic properties 4 1 Euler s integral transform 4 2 Differentiation 5 Contiguous function and related identities 6 Identities 6 1 Saalschutz s theorem 6 2 Dixon s identity 6 3 Dougall s formula 6 4 Generalization of Kummer s transformations and identities for 2F2 6 5 Kummer s relation 6 6 Clausen s formula 7 Special cases 7 1 The series 0F0 7 2 The series 0F1 7 3 The series 1F0 7 4 The series 1F1 7 5 The series 1F2 7 6 The series 2F0 7 7 The series 2F1 7 8 The series 3F0 7 9 The series 3F1 7 10 The series 3F2 7 11 The series 4F3 7 12 The series q 1Fq 8 Generalizations 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksNotation EditA hypergeometric series is formally defined as a power series b 0 b 1 z b 2 z 2 n 0 b n z n displaystyle beta 0 beta 1 z beta 2 z 2 dots sum n geqslant 0 beta n z n in which the ratio of successive coefficients is a rational function of n That is b n 1 b n A n B n displaystyle frac beta n 1 beta n frac A n B n where A n and B n are polynomials in n For example in the case of the series for the exponential function 1 z 1 z 2 2 z 3 3 displaystyle 1 frac z 1 frac z 2 2 frac z 3 3 cdots we have b n 1 n b n 1 b n 1 n 1 displaystyle beta n frac 1 n qquad frac beta n 1 beta n frac 1 n 1 So this satisfies the definition with A n 1 and B n n 1 It is customary to factor out the leading term so b0 is assumed to be 1 The polynomials can be factored into linear factors of the form aj n and bk n respectively where the aj and bk are complex numbers For historical reasons it is assumed that 1 n is a factor of B If this is not already the case then both A and B can be multiplied by this factor the factor cancels so the terms are unchanged and there is no loss of generality The ratio between consecutive coefficients now has the form c a 1 n a p n d b 1 n b q n 1 n displaystyle frac c a 1 n cdots a p n d b 1 n cdots b q n 1 n where c and d are the leading coefficients of A and B The series then has the form 1 a 1 a p b 1 b q 1 c z d a 1 a p b 1 b q 1 a 1 1 a p 1 b 1 1 b q 1 2 c z d 2 displaystyle 1 frac a 1 cdots a p b 1 cdots b q cdot 1 frac cz d frac a 1 cdots a p b 1 cdots b q cdot 1 frac a 1 1 cdots a p 1 b 1 1 cdots b q 1 cdot 2 left frac cz d right 2 cdots or by scaling z by the appropriate factor and rearranging 1 a 1 a p b 1 b q z 1 a 1 a 1 1 a p a p 1 b 1 b 1 1 b q b q 1 z 2 2 displaystyle 1 frac a 1 cdots a p b 1 cdots b q frac z 1 frac a 1 a 1 1 cdots a p a p 1 b 1 b 1 1 cdots b q b q 1 frac z 2 2 cdots This has the form of an exponential generating function This series is usually denoted by p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z displaystyle p F q a 1 ldots a p b 1 ldots b q z or p F q a 1 a 2 a p b 1 b 2 b q z displaystyle p F q left begin matrix a 1 amp a 2 amp cdots amp a p b 1 amp b 2 amp cdots amp b q end matrix z right Using the rising factorial or Pochhammer symbol a 0 1 a n a a 1 a 2 a n 1 n 1 displaystyle begin aligned a 0 amp 1 a n amp a a 1 a 2 cdots a n 1 amp amp n geq 1 end aligned this can be written p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z n 0 a 1 n a p n b 1 n b q n z n n displaystyle p F q a 1 ldots a p b 1 ldots b q z sum n 0 infty frac a 1 n cdots a p n b 1 n cdots b q n frac z n n Note that this use of the Pochhammer symbol is not standard however it is the standard usage in this context Terminology EditWhen all the terms of the series are defined and it has a non zero radius of convergence then the series defines an analytic function Such a function and its analytic continuations is called the hypergeometric function The case when the radius of convergence is 0 yields many interesting series in mathematics for example the incomplete gamma function has the asymptotic expansion G a z z a 1 e z 1 a 1 z a 1 a 2 z 2 displaystyle Gamma a z sim z a 1 e z left 1 frac a 1 z frac a 1 a 2 z 2 cdots right which could be written za 1e z 2F0 1 a 1 z 1 However the use of the term hypergeometric series is usually restricted to the case where the series defines an actual analytic function The ordinary hypergeometric series should not be confused with the basic hypergeometric series which despite its name is a rather more complicated and recondite series The basic series is the q analog of the ordinary hypergeometric series There are several such generalizations of the ordinary hypergeometric series including the ones coming from zonal spherical functions on Riemannian symmetric spaces The series without the factor of n in the denominator summed over all integers n including negative is called the bilateral hypergeometric series Convergence conditions EditThere are certain values of the aj and bk for which the numerator or the denominator of the coefficients is 0 If any aj is a non positive integer 0 1 2 etc then the series only has a finite number of terms and is in fact a polynomial of degree aj If any bk is a non positive integer excepting the previous case with bk lt aj then the denominators become 0 and the series is undefined Excluding these cases the ratio test can be applied to determine the radius of convergence If p lt q 1 then the ratio of coefficients tends to zero This implies that the series converges for any finite value of z and thus defines an entire function of z An example is the power series for the exponential function If p q 1 then the ratio of coefficients tends to one This implies that the series converges for z lt 1 and diverges for z gt 1 Whether it converges for z 1 is more difficult to determine Analytic continuation can be employed for larger values of z If p gt q 1 then the ratio of coefficients grows without bound This implies that besides z 0 the series diverges This is then a divergent or asymptotic series or it can be interpreted as a symbolic shorthand for a differential equation that the sum satisfies formally The question of convergence for p q 1 when z is on the unit circle is more difficult It can be shown that the series converges absolutely at z 1 if ℜ b k a j gt 0 displaystyle Re left sum b k sum a j right gt 0 Further if p q 1 i 1 p a i j 1 q b j displaystyle sum i 1 p a i geq sum j 1 q b j and z is real then the following convergence result holds Quigley et al 2013 lim z 1 1 z d log p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z p d z i 1 p a i j 1 q b j displaystyle lim z rightarrow 1 1 z frac d log p F q a 1 ldots a p b 1 ldots b q z p dz sum i 1 p a i sum j 1 q b j Basic properties EditIt is immediate from the definition that the order of the parameters aj or the order of the parameters bk can be changed without changing the value of the function Also if any of the parameters aj is equal to any of the parameters bk then the matching parameters can be cancelled out with certain exceptions when the parameters are non positive integers For example 2 F 1 3 1 1 z 2 F 1 1 3 1 z 1 F 0 3 z displaystyle 2 F 1 3 1 1 z 2 F 1 1 3 1 z 1 F 0 3 z This cancelling is a special case of a reduction formula that may be applied whenever a parameter on the top row differs from one on the bottom row by a non negative integer 1 A 1 F B 1 a 1 a A c n b 1 b B c z j 0 n n j z j c j i 1 A a i j i 1 B b i j A F B a 1 j a A j b 1 j b B j z displaystyle A 1 F B 1 left begin array c a 1 ldots a A c n b 1 ldots b B c end array z right sum j 0 n binom n j frac z j c j frac prod i 1 A a i j prod i 1 B b i j A F B left begin array c a 1 j ldots a A j b 1 j ldots b B j end array z right Euler s integral transform Edit The following basic identity is very useful as it relates the higher order hypergeometric functions in terms of integrals over the lower order ones 2 A 1 F B 1 a 1 a A c b 1 b B d z G d G c G d c 0 1 t c 1 1 t d c 1 A F B a 1 a A b 1 b B t z d t displaystyle A 1 F B 1 left begin array c a 1 ldots a A c b 1 ldots b B d end array z right frac Gamma d Gamma c Gamma d c int 0 1 t c 1 1 t d c 1 A F B left begin array c a 1 ldots a A b 1 ldots b B end array tz right dt Differentiation Edit The generalized hypergeometric function satisfies z d d z a j p F q a 1 a j a p b 1 b q z a j p F q a 1 a j 1 a p b 1 b q z displaystyle begin aligned left z frac rm d rm d z a j right p F q left begin array c a 1 dots a j dots a p b 1 dots b q end array z right amp a j p F q left begin array c a 1 dots a j 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q end array z right end aligned and z d d z b k 1 p F q a 1 a p b 1 b k b q z b k 1 p F q a 1 a p b 1 b k 1 b q z for b k 1 displaystyle begin aligned left z frac rm d rm d z b k 1 right p F q left begin array c a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b k dots b q end array z right amp b k 1 p F q left begin array c a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b k 1 dots b q end array z right text for b k neq 1 end aligned Additionally d d z p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z i 1 p a i j 1 q b j p F q a 1 1 a p 1 b 1 1 b q 1 z displaystyle begin aligned frac rm d rm d z p F q left begin array c a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q end array z right amp frac prod i 1 p a i prod j 1 q b j p F q left begin array c a 1 1 dots a p 1 b 1 1 dots b q 1 end array z right end aligned Combining these gives a differential equation satisfied by w pFq z n 1 p z d d z a n w z d d z n 1 q z d d z b n 1 w displaystyle z prod n 1 p left z frac rm d rm d z a n right w z frac rm d rm d z prod n 1 q left z frac rm d rm d z b n 1 right w Contiguous function and related identities EditTake the following operator ϑ z d d z displaystyle vartheta z frac rm d rm d z From the differentiation formulas given above the linear space spanned by p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z ϑ p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z displaystyle p F q a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q z vartheta p F q a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q z contains each of p F q a 1 a j 1 a p b 1 b q z displaystyle p F q a 1 dots a j 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q z p F q a 1 a p b 1 b k 1 b q z displaystyle p F q a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b k 1 dots b q z z p F q a 1 1 a p 1 b 1 1 b q 1 z displaystyle z p F q a 1 1 dots a p 1 b 1 1 dots b q 1 z p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z displaystyle p F q a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q z Since the space has dimension 2 any three of these p q 2 functions are linearly dependent These dependencies can be written out to generate a large number of identities involving p F q displaystyle p F q For example in the simplest non trivial case 0 F 1 a z 1 0 F 1 a z displaystyle 0 F 1 a z 1 0 F 1 a z 0 F 1 a 1 z ϑ a 1 1 0 F 1 a z displaystyle 0 F 1 a 1 z frac vartheta a 1 1 0 F 1 a z z 0 F 1 a 1 z a ϑ 0 F 1 a z displaystyle z 0 F 1 a 1 z a vartheta 0 F 1 a z So 0 F 1 a 1 z 0 F 1 a z z a a 1 0 F 1 a 1 z displaystyle 0 F 1 a 1 z 0 F 1 a z frac z a a 1 0 F 1 a 1 z This and other important examples 1 F 1 a 1 b z 1 F 1 a b z z b 1 F 1 a 1 b 1 z displaystyle 1 F 1 a 1 b z 1 F 1 a b z frac z b 1 F 1 a 1 b 1 z 1 F 1 a b 1 z 1 F 1 a b z a z b b 1 1 F 1 a 1 b 1 z displaystyle 1 F 1 a b 1 z 1 F 1 a b z frac az b b 1 1 F 1 a 1 b 1 z 1 F 1 a b 1 z 1 F 1 a 1 b z a b 1 z b b 1 1 F 1 a 1 b 1 z displaystyle 1 F 1 a b 1 z 1 F 1 a 1 b z frac a b 1 z b b 1 1 F 1 a 1 b 1 z 2 F 1 a 1 b c z 2 F 1 a b c z b z c 2 F 1 a 1 b 1 c 1 z displaystyle 2 F 1 a 1 b c z 2 F 1 a b c z frac bz c 2 F 1 a 1 b 1 c 1 z 2 F 1 a 1 b c z 2 F 1 a b 1 c z b a z c 2 F 1 a 1 b 1 c 1 z displaystyle 2 F 1 a 1 b c z 2 F 1 a b 1 c z frac b a z c 2 F 1 a 1 b 1 c 1 z 2 F 1 a b c 1 z 2 F 1 a 1 b c z a c 1 b z c c 1 2 F 1 a 1 b 1 c 1 z displaystyle 2 F 1 a b c 1 z 2 F 1 a 1 b c z frac a c 1 bz c c 1 2 F 1 a 1 b 1 c 1 z can be used to generate continued fraction expressions known as Gauss s continued fraction Similarly by applying the differentiation formulas twice there are p q 3 2 displaystyle binom p q 3 2 such functions contained in 1 ϑ ϑ 2 p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z displaystyle 1 vartheta vartheta 2 p F q a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q z which has dimension three so any four are linearly dependent This generates more identities and the process can be continued The identities thus generated can be combined with each other to produce new ones in a different way A function obtained by adding 1 to exactly one of the parameters aj bk in p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z displaystyle p F q a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q z is called contiguous to p F q a 1 a p b 1 b q z displaystyle p F q a 1 dots a p b 1 dots b q z Using the technique outlined above an identity relating 0 F 1 a z displaystyle 0 F 1 a z and its two contiguous functions can be given six identities relating 1 F 1 a b z displaystyle 1 F 1 a b z and any two of its four contiguous functions and fifteen identities relating 2 F 1 a b c z displaystyle 2 F 1 a b c z and any two of its six contiguous functions have been found The first one was derived in the previous paragraph The last fifteen were given by Gauss in his 1812 paper Identities EditFor identities involving the Gauss hypergeometric function 2F1 see Hypergeometric function A number of other hypergeometric function identities were discovered in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries A 20th century contribution to the methodology of proving these identities is the Egorychev method Saalschutz s theorem Edit Saalschutz s theorem 3 Saalschutz 1890 is 3 F 2 a b n c 1 a b c n 1 c a n c b n c n c a b n displaystyle 3 F 2 a b n c 1 a b c n 1 frac c a n c b n c n c a b n For extension of this theorem see a research paper by Rakha amp Rathie Dixon s identity Edit Main article Dixon s identity Dixon s identity 4 first proved by Dixon 1902 gives the sum of a well poised 3F2 at 1 3 F 2 a b c 1 a b 1 a c 1 G 1 a 2 G 1 a 2 b c G 1 a b G 1 a c G 1 a G 1 a b c G 1 a 2 b G 1 a 2 c displaystyle 3 F 2 a b c 1 a b 1 a c 1 frac Gamma 1 frac a 2 Gamma 1 frac a 2 b c Gamma 1 a b Gamma 1 a c Gamma 1 a Gamma 1 a b c Gamma 1 frac a 2 b Gamma 1 frac a 2 c For generalization of Dixon s identity see a paper by Lavoie et al Dougall s formula Edit Dougall s formula Dougall 1907 gives the sum of a very well poised series that is terminating and 2 balanced 7 F 6 a 1 a 2 b c d e m a 2 1 a b 1 a c 1 a d 1 a e 1 a m 1 1 a m 1 a b c m 1 a c d m 1 a b d m 1 a b m 1 a c m 1 a d m 1 a b c d m displaystyle begin aligned 7 F 6 amp left begin matrix a amp 1 frac a 2 amp b amp c amp d amp e amp m amp frac a 2 amp 1 a b amp 1 a c amp 1 a d amp 1 a e amp 1 a m end matrix 1 right amp frac 1 a m 1 a b c m 1 a c d m 1 a b d m 1 a b m 1 a c m 1 a d m 1 a b c d m end aligned Terminating means that m is a non negative integer and 2 balanced means that 1 2 a b c d e m displaystyle 1 2a b c d e m Many of the other formulas for special values of hypergeometric functions can be derived from this as special or limiting cases Generalization of Kummer s transformations and identities for 2F2 Edit Identity 1 e x 2 F 2 a 1 d c d x 2 F 2 c a 1 f 1 c f x displaystyle e x 2 F 2 a 1 d c d x 2 F 2 c a 1 f 1 c f x where f d a c 1 a d displaystyle f frac d a c 1 a d Identity 2 e x 2 2 F 2 a 1 b 2 a 1 b x 0 F 1 a 1 2 x 2 16 x 1 2 a b 2 2 a 1 0 F 1 a 3 2 x 2 16 displaystyle e frac x 2 2 F 2 left a 1 b 2a 1 b x right 0 F 1 left a tfrac 1 2 tfrac x 2 16 right frac x left 1 tfrac 2a b right 2 2a 1 0 F 1 left a tfrac 3 2 tfrac x 2 16 right which links Bessel functions to 2F2 this reduces to Kummer s second formula for b 2a Identity 3 e x 2 1 F 1 a 2 a x 0 F 1 a 1 2 x 2 16 displaystyle e frac x 2 1 F 1 a 2a x 0 F 1 left a tfrac 1 2 tfrac x 2 16 right Identity 4 2 F 2 a b c d x i 0 b d i a i 1 i c i 1 i d i 1 i 1 F 1 a i c i x x i i e x i 0 b d i a i 1 i c i 1 i d i 1 i 1 F 1 c a c i x x i i displaystyle begin aligned 2 F 2 a b c d x amp sum i 0 frac b d choose i a i 1 choose i c i 1 choose i d i 1 choose i 1 F 1 a i c i x frac x i i amp e x sum i 0 frac b d choose i a i 1 choose i c i 1 choose i d i 1 choose i 1 F 1 c a c i x frac x i i end aligned which is a finite sum if b d is a non negative integer Kummer s relation Edit Kummer s relation is 2 F 1 2 a 2 b a b 1 2 x 2 F 1 a b a b 1 2 4 x 1 x displaystyle 2 F 1 left 2a 2b a b tfrac 1 2 x right 2 F 1 left a b a b tfrac 1 2 4x 1 x right Clausen s formula Edit Main article Clausen s formula Clausen s formula 3 F 2 2 c 2 s 1 2 s c 1 2 2 c 1 c x 2 F 1 c s 1 2 s c x 2 displaystyle 3 F 2 2c 2s 1 2s c tfrac 1 2 2c 1 c x 2 F 1 c s tfrac 1 2 s c x 2 was used by de Branges to prove the Bieberbach conjecture Special cases EditMany of the special functions in mathematics are special cases of the confluent hypergeometric function or the hypergeometric function see the corresponding articles for examples The series 0F0 Edit Main article Exponential function As noted earlier 0 F 0 z e z displaystyle 0 F 0 z e z The differential equation for this function is d d z w w displaystyle frac d dz w w which has solutions w k e z displaystyle w ke z where k is a constant The series 0F1 Edit The functions of the form 0 F 1 a z displaystyle 0 F 1 a z are called confluent hypergeometric limit functions and are closely related to Bessel functions The relationship is J a x x 2 a G a 1 0 F 1 a 1 1 4 x 2 displaystyle J alpha x frac tfrac x 2 alpha Gamma alpha 1 0 F 1 left alpha 1 tfrac 1 4 x 2 right I a x x 2 a G a 1 0 F 1 a 1 1 4 x 2 displaystyle I alpha x frac tfrac x 2 alpha Gamma alpha 1 0 F 1 left alpha 1 tfrac 1 4 x 2 right The differential equation for this function is w z d d z a d w d z displaystyle w left z frac d dz a right frac dw dz or z d 2 w d z 2 a d w d z w 0 displaystyle z frac d 2 w dz 2 a frac dw dz w 0 When a is not a positive integer the substitution w z 1 a u displaystyle w z 1 a u gives a linearly independent solution z 1 a 0 F 1 2 a z displaystyle z 1 a 0 F 1 2 a z so the general solution is k 0 F 1 a z l z 1 a 0 F 1 2 a z displaystyle k 0 F 1 a z lz 1 a 0 F 1 2 a z where k l are constants If a is a positive integer the independent solution is given by the appropriate Bessel function of the second kind A special case is 0 F 1 1 2 z 2 4 cos z displaystyle 0 F 1 left frac 1 2 frac z 2 4 right cos z The series 1F0 Edit Main article Binomial series An important case is 1 F 0 a z 1 z a displaystyle 1 F 0 a z 1 z a The differential equation for this function is d d z w z d d z a w displaystyle frac d dz w left z frac d dz a right w or 1 z d w d z a w displaystyle 1 z frac dw dz aw which has solutions w k 1 z a displaystyle w k 1 z a where k is a constant 1 F 0 1 z n 0 z n 1 z 1 displaystyle 1 F 0 1 z sum n geqslant 0 z n 1 z 1 is the geometric series with ratio z and coefficient 1 z 1 F 0 2 z n 0 n z n z 1 z 2 displaystyle z 1 F 0 2 z sum n geqslant 0 nz n z 1 z 2 is also useful The series 1F1 Edit Main article Confluent hypergeometric function The functions of the form 1 F 1 a b z displaystyle 1 F 1 a b z are called confluent hypergeometric functions of the first kind also written M a b z displaystyle M a b z The incomplete gamma function g a z displaystyle gamma a z is a special case The differential equation for this function is z d d z a w z d d z b d w d z displaystyle left z frac d dz a right w left z frac d dz b right frac dw dz or z d 2 w d z 2 b z d w d z a w 0 displaystyle z frac d 2 w dz 2 b z frac dw dz aw 0 When b is not a positive integer the substitution w z 1 b u displaystyle w z 1 b u gives a linearly independent solution z 1 b 1 F 1 1 a b 2 b z displaystyle z 1 b 1 F 1 1 a b 2 b z so the general solution is k 1 F 1 a b z l z 1 b 1 F 1 1 a b 2 b z displaystyle k 1 F 1 a b z lz 1 b 1 F 1 1 a b 2 b z where k l are constants When a is a non positive integer n 1 F 1 n b z displaystyle 1 F 1 n b z is a polynomial Up to constant factors these are the Laguerre polynomials This implies Hermite polynomials can be expressed in terms of 1F1 as well The series 1F2 Edit Relations to other functions are known for certain parameter combinations only The function x 1 F 2 1 2 3 2 3 2 x 2 4 displaystyle x 1 F 2 left frac 1 2 frac 3 2 frac 3 2 frac x 2 4 right is the antiderivative of the cardinal sine With modified values of a 1 displaystyle a 1 and b 1 displaystyle b 1 one obtains the antiderivative of sin x b x a displaystyle sin x beta x alpha 5 It has been proposed that 1 F 2 n 1 2 n 1 2 n 1 x 2 displaystyle 1 F 2 left n frac 1 2 n 1 2n 1 x 2 right can be expressed through the Bessel function J n x displaystyle J n x and its derivative 6 The function 1 F 2 1 a a 1 x displaystyle 1 F 2 1 a a 1 x is essentially a Lommel function 7 The series 2F0 Edit This occurs in connection with the exponential integral function Ei z The series 2F1 Edit Main article Hypergeometric function Historically the most important are the functions of the form 2 F 1 a b c z displaystyle 2 F 1 a b c z These are sometimes called Gauss s hypergeometric functions classical standard hypergeometric or often simply hypergeometric functions The term Generalized hypergeometric function is used for the functions pFq if there is risk of confusion This function was first studied in detail by Carl Friedrich Gauss who explored the conditions for its convergence The differential equation for this function is z d d z a z d d z b w z d d z c d w d z displaystyle left z frac d dz a right left z frac d dz b right w left z frac d dz c right frac dw dz or z 1 z d 2 w d z 2 c a b 1 z d w d z a b w 0 displaystyle z 1 z frac d 2 w dz 2 left c a b 1 z right frac dw dz ab w 0 It is known as the hypergeometric differential equation When c is not a positive integer the substitution w z 1 c u displaystyle w z 1 c u gives a linearly independent solution z 1 c 2 F 1 1 a c 1 b c 2 c z displaystyle z 1 c 2 F 1 1 a c 1 b c 2 c z so the general solution for z lt 1 is k 2 F 1 a b c z l z 1 c 2 F 1 1 a c 1 b c 2 c z displaystyle k 2 F 1 a b c z lz 1 c 2 F 1 1 a c 1 b c 2 c z where k l are constants Different solutions can be derived for other values of z In fact there are 24 solutions known as the Kummer solutions derivable using various identities valid in different regions of the complex plane When a is a non positive integer n 2 F 1 n b c z displaystyle 2 F 1 n b c z is a polynomial Up to constant factors and scaling these are the Jacobi polynomials Several other classes of orthogonal polynomials up to constant factors are special cases of Jacobi polynomials so these can be expressed using 2F1 as well This includes Legendre polynomials and Chebyshev polynomials A wide range of integrals of elementary functions can be expressed using the hypergeometric function e g 0 x 1 y a d y x 2 a a 2 F 1 1 a 1 2 1 1 a x a 2 x a 1 a 0 displaystyle int 0 x sqrt 1 y alpha mathrm d y frac x 2 alpha left alpha 2 F 1 left tfrac 1 alpha tfrac 1 2 1 tfrac 1 alpha x alpha right 2 sqrt x alpha 1 right qquad alpha neq 0 The series 3F0 Edit This occurs in connection with Mott polynomials 8 The series 3F1 Edit This occurs in the theory of Bessel functions It provides a way to compute Bessel functions of large arguments The series 3F2 Edit The function Li 2 x n gt 0 x n n 2 x 3 F 2 1 1 1 2 2 x displaystyle operatorname Li 2 x sum n gt 0 x n n 2 x 3 F 2 1 1 1 2 2 x dd is the dilogarithm 9 The function Q n x a b N 3 F 2 n x n a b 1 a 1 N 1 1 displaystyle Q n x a b N 3 F 2 n x n a b 1 a 1 N 1 1 dd is a Hahn polynomial The series 4F3 Edit The function p n t 2 a b n a c n a d n 4 F 3 n a b c d n 1 a t a t a b a c a d 1 displaystyle p n t 2 a b n a c n a d n 4 F 3 left begin matrix n amp a b c d n 1 amp a t amp a t a b amp a c amp a d end matrix 1 right dd is a Wilson polynomial The series q 1Fq Edit The functions Li q z z q 1 F q 1 1 1 2 2 2 z displaystyle operatorname Li q z z q 1 F q left 1 1 ldots 1 2 2 ldots 2 z right Li p z z p F p 1 2 2 2 1 1 1 z displaystyle operatorname Li p z z p F p 1 left 2 2 ldots 2 1 1 ldots 1 z right dd for q N 0 displaystyle q in mathbb N 0 and p N displaystyle p in mathbb N are the Polylogarithm Generalizations EditThe generalized hypergeometric function is linked to the Meijer G function and the MacRobert E function Hypergeometric series were generalised to several variables for example by Paul Emile Appell and Joseph Kampe de Feriet but a comparable general theory took long to emerge Many identities were found some quite remarkable A generalization the q series analogues called the basic hypergeometric series were given by Eduard Heine in the late nineteenth century Here the ratios considered of successive terms instead of a rational function of n are a rational function of qn Another generalization the elliptic hypergeometric series are those series where the ratio of terms is an elliptic function a doubly periodic meromorphic function of n During the twentieth century this was a fruitful area of combinatorial mathematics with numerous connections to other fields There are a number of new definitions of general hypergeometric functions by Aomoto Israel Gelfand and others and applications for example to the combinatorics of arranging a number of hyperplanes in complex N space see arrangement of hyperplanes Special hypergeometric functions occur as zonal spherical functions on Riemannian symmetric spaces and semi simple Lie groups Their importance and role can be understood through the following example the hypergeometric series 2F1 has the Legendre polynomials as a special case and when considered in the form of spherical harmonics these polynomials reflect in a certain sense the symmetry properties of the two sphere or equivalently the rotations given by the Lie group SO 3 In tensor product decompositions of concrete representations of this group Clebsch Gordan coefficients are met which can be written as 3F2 hypergeometric series Bilateral hypergeometric series are a generalization of hypergeometric functions where one sums over all integers not just the positive ones Fox Wright functions are a generalization of generalized hypergeometric functions where the Pochhammer symbols in the series expression are generalised to gamma functions of linear expressions in the index n See also EditAppell series Humbert series Kampe de Feriet function Lauricella hypergeometric seriesNotes Edit Prudnikov A P Brychkov Yu A Marichev O I 1990 Integrals amp Series Volume 3 More Special Functions Gordon and Breach p 439 Slater 1966 Equation 4 1 2 See Slater 1966 Section 2 3 1 or Bailey 1935 Section 2 2 for a proof See Bailey 1935 Section 3 1 for a detailed proof An alternative proof is in Slater 1966 Section 2 3 3 Victor Nijimbere Ural Math J vol 3 1 and https arxiv org abs 1703 01907 2017 https math stackexchange com questions 3978473 2021 Watson s Treatise on the Theory of Bessel functions 1966 Section 10 7 Equation 10 according to https mathoverflow net questions 98684 See Erdelyi et al 1955 Candan Cagatay A Simple Proof of F 1 1 1 2 2 x dilog 1 x x PDF References EditAskey R A Daalhuis Adri B Olde 2010 Generalized hypergeometric function in Olver Frank W J Lozier Daniel M Boisvert Ronald F Clark Charles W eds NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 19225 5 MR 2723248 Andrews George E Askey Richard amp Roy Ranjan 1999 Special functions Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications Vol 71 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78988 2 MR 1688958 Bailey W N 1935 Generalized Hypergeometric Series Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics Vol 32 London Cambridge University Press Zbl 0011 02303 Dixon A C 1902 Summation of a certain series Proc London Math Soc 35 1 284 291 doi 10 1112 plms s1 35 1 284 JFM 34 0490 02 Dougall J 1907 On Vandermonde s theorem and some more general expansions Proc Edinburgh Math Soc 25 114 132 doi 10 1017 S0013091500033642 Erdelyi Arthur Magnus Wilhelm Oberhettinger Fritz Tricomi Francesco G 1955 Higher transcendental functions Vol III McGraw Hill Book Company Inc New York Toronto London MR 0066496 Gasper George Rahman Mizan 2004 Basic Hypergeometric Series Encyclopedia of Mathematics and Its Applications Vol 96 2nd ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83357 8 MR 2128719 Zbl 1129 33005 the first edition has ISBN 0 521 35049 2 Gauss Carl Friedrich 1813 Disquisitiones generales circa seriam infinitam 1 a b 1 g x a a 1 b b 1 1 2 g g 1 x x etc displaystyle 1 tfrac alpha beta 1 cdot gamma x tfrac alpha alpha 1 beta beta 1 1 cdot 2 cdot gamma gamma 1 x x mbox etc Commentationes Societatis Regiae Scientarum Gottingensis Recentiores in Latin Gottingen 2 a reprint of this paper can be found in Carl Friedrich Gauss Werke p 125 Grinshpan A Z 2013 Generalized hypergeometric functions product identities and weighted norm inequalities The Ramanujan Journal 31 1 2 53 66 doi 10 1007 s11139 013 9487 x S2CID 121054930Heckman Gerrit amp Schlichtkrull Henrik 1994 Harmonic Analysis and Special Functions on Symmetric Spaces San Diego Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 336170 7 part 1 treats hypergeometric functions on Lie groups Lavoie J L Grondin F Rathie A K Arora K 1994 Generalizations of Dixon s theorem on the sum of a 3F2 Math Comp 62 205 267 276 doi 10 2307 2153407 JSTOR 2153407 Miller A R Paris R B 2011 Euler type transformations for the generalized hypergeometric function r 2Fr 1 Z Angew Math Phys 62 1 31 45 Bibcode 2011ZaMP 62 31M doi 10 1007 s00033 010 0085 0 S2CID 30484300 Quigley J Wilson K J Walls L Bedford T 2013 A Bayes linear Bayes Method for Estimation of Correlated Event Rates PDF Risk Analysis 33 12 2209 2224 doi 10 1111 risa 12035 PMID 23551053 S2CID 24476762 Rathie Arjun K Pogany Tibor K 2008 New summation formula for 3F2 1 2 and a Kummer type II transformation of 2F2 x Mathematical Communications 13 63 66 MR 2422088 Zbl 1146 33002 Rakha M A Rathie Arjun K 2011 Extensions of Euler s type II transformation and Saalschutz s theorem Bull Korean Math Soc 48 1 151 156 doi 10 4134 bkms 2011 48 1 151 Saalschutz L 1890 Eine Summationsformel Zeitschrift fur Mathematik und Physik in German 35 186 188 JFM 22 0262 03 Slater Lucy Joan 1966 Generalized Hypergeometric Functions Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 06483 5 MR 0201688 Zbl 0135 28101 there is a 2008 paperback with ISBN 978 0 521 09061 2 Yoshida Masaaki 1997 Hypergeometric Functions My Love Modular Interpretations of Configuration Spaces Braunschweig Wiesbaden Friedr Vieweg amp Sohn ISBN 978 3 528 06925 4 MR 1453580 External links EditThe book A B this book is freely downloadable from the internet MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Generalized Hypergeometric Function MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Hypergeometric Function MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Confluent Hypergeometric Function of the First Kind MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Confluent Hypergeometric Limit Function MathWorld Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Generalized hypergeometric function amp oldid 1162130117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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