Questions tagged [hypergeometric-function]

Hypergeometric functions often refer to a family of functions ${}_p F_q$ represented by a corresponding series, where $p,q$ are non-negative integers. The case ${}_2F_1(a,b;c;z)$ is a special case of particular importance; it is known as the Gaussian, or ordinary, hypergeometric function.

The term "hypergeometric series" was first used by John Wallis in his 1655 book Arithmetica Infinitorum. Hypergeometric series were studied by Leonhard Euler, but the first full systematic treatment was given by Carl Friedrich Gauss (1813). It refers to a family of functions $$ _p F_q(z) = F(\{a\};\{b\};z) =\sum_{n=0}^{\infty} \frac{(a_1)_n\cdots (a_p)_n}{n! (b_1)_n\cdots (b_q)_n} z^n $$Here $(a)_n=a(a+1)\cdots(a+n-1)$ is the increasing Pochhammer symbol; care should be taken, as the notation is occasionally ambiguous. For $p=q+1$ the series converges for $|z|\le 1$; for $p\le q$ it converges for any complex $z$.

The case ${}_2F_1(z)$ is particularly important. Studies in the nineteenth century included those of Ernst Kummer (1836), and the fundamental characterization by Bernhard Riemann of the hypergeometric function by means of the differential equation it satisfies. Riemann showed that the second-order differential equation for ${}_2F_1(z)$, examined in the complex plane, could be characterized (on the Riemann sphere) by its three regular singularities. Many special and elementary functions are specific or limiting cases. It is a solution of a second-order linear ordinary differential equation (ODE). Every second-order linear ODE with three regular singular points can be transformed into this equation. The cases where the solutions are algebraic functions were found by Hermann Schwarz (Schwarz's list).

Evaluation of higher hypergeometric functions is a complex and interesting topic. Important formulas include Clausen's formula: $$ \left({_2F_1}(\{a,b\};\{a+b+1/2\};z\right)^2 = {_3F_2}(\{2a,2b,a+b\};\{2a+2b,a+b+1/2\};z); $$the positivity of the RHS for real $z$ is useful. Generalizations include using $q$-binomial coefficients, the Meijer-G function, and Fox-Wright functions, where the Pochhammer symbols are taken as gamma functions.

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Is this Hypergeometric Identity new?

$$\frac{\left(\beta_{2}+\beta_{1}\right)^{\alpha_{1}+\alpha_{2}-1}B\left(\alpha_{1},\alpha_{2}\right)}{\beta_{1}^{\alpha_{1}}\beta_{2}^{\alpha_{2}}}=\frac{1}{\alpha_{1}\beta_{2}}{_{2}F_{1}}\left({1-\alpha_{2},1\atop…
rrogers
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Using Ramanujan's Method to Prove Larger Hypergeometric Functions

Ramanujan had an interesting method for coming up with different hypergeometric identities. I'll provide a brief followthrough of how: Ramanujan's Method of Morley's Identity: Start with the product of two binomials…
Crescendo
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Hypergeometric value

Is their a closed form for the following $${}_2F_1 \left(a,b;c;\frac{1}{2} \right)$$ I would use the following $${}_2F_1 \left(a,b;c;x \right)= \frac{\Gamma(c)}{\Gamma(c-b)\Gamma(b)} \int^1_0 t^{b-1}(1-t)^{c-b-1} (1-xt)^{-a} \, dt $$ But it…
Zaid Alyafeai
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Rewriting Appell's Hypergeometric Function $F_1$ in terms of Gauss' Hypergeometric Function $_2F_1$

While going through David H. answer on What is $\int_0^1 \frac{\log \left(1-x^2\right) \sin ^{-1}(x)^2}{x^2} \, dx$? I have encountered a step in between I do not really understand. Within the second half of Part $3$ he has rewritten an Appellian…
mrtaurho
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Proving the Hypergeometric Sequence

Question: How do you prove$$_4F_3\left[\begin{array}{c c}\frac 12n+1,n,-x,-y\\\frac 12n,x+n+1,y+n+1\end{array};-1\right]=\dfrac {\Gamma(x+n+1)\Gamma(y+n+1)}{\Gamma(n+1)\Gamma(x+y+n+1)}\tag{1}$$For $\Re(2x+2y+n+2)>0$ I'm not sure how to prove this.…
Crescendo
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Proving Saalschutz Theorem

I saw this in a pdf, and I'm wondering Questions: How do you prove Saalschutz Theorem: $$_3F_2\left[\begin{array}{c,c}-x,-y,-z\\n+1,-x-y-z-n\end{array}\right]=\dfrac…
Frank
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Database of hypergeometric functions

Knuth wrote in Concrete Math that hypergeometric functions are useful because they allow the construction of a "database" of identities, since any sum with the property that the ratio between successive terms is a rational function of $z$ can be put…
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strange hypergeometric coefficients in Concrete Mathematics book

I don't understand how in this famous book they obtained hypergeometric coefficients for $$ \sum_{k\leq n} z^k \binom{n-k}{k}.\tag{5.74} $$ They say it is $\displaystyle F{-n,\ 1+2\lceil \frac{n}{2}\rceil\choose -1/2}$ with constant…
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Hypergeometric Function Transformation

After changing $a$ to $2a+1$ and $b$ to $a$ in the following expression $$\operatorname{F}\left(a,b,2b;x\right)=\left(1-\frac{x}{2}\right)^{-a}\operatorname{F}\left(\frac{a}{2},\frac{a}{2}+1,b+\frac{1}{2};\frac{x^2}{\left(2-x\right)^2}\right)$$ how…
Hisoka
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Appell hypergeometric identity

In this paper http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022247X09000997 the authors conclude that the Appell hypergeometric function $$ F_4\left(\begin{matrix}a; b \\ c, a+b-c+1\end{matrix} \bigg| \, \, t^2, (1-t)^2 \right) $$ and the…
GKiu
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Is there a summation to gamma transformation

Question: Is there a transformation you can use on a sum$$\sum\limits_{k=0}^{\infty}\text{something}$$To transform it into an expression with the gamma function? In other words, is this possible:$$\sum\limits_{k=0}^{\infty}\text{something}=\dfrac…
Crescendo
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Hypergeometric function ratios: $\frac{_{2}F_{1}(a+1,b;c;x)}{_{2}F_{1}(a,b;c;x)}$?

I need a numerically stable way to compute the following ratio: $$\frac{_{2}F_{1}(a+1,b;c;x)}{_{2}F_{1}(a,b;c;x)},$$ All the parameters are real numbers, with $a< 0$,$\ $ $b,c > 0$ and $0
a06e
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Is it possible to express this function with a hypergeometric function?

I have this expression. $$ \tag{1} \sum_{i=0}^q\color{red}{(-1)^i\binom{2q+1-i}{i}2^{2q+1-2i}} \frac{1}{2^{N+2q-2i+1}}\binom{N+2q-2i+1}{\frac{N+1}{2}+q-i} $$ I want to express this with the hypergeometric function ${_2F_1}$, but I don't know if it…
ck1987pd
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Lower bound on hypergeometric function ${}_2F_1$

I am at my wit's end trying to show the following lower bound: $${}_2F_1[-m, -m; -(m+l); z]\geq (1-z)^m,\tag{1}$$ where ${}_2F_1[a,b;c;z]$ is the Gauss hypergeometric function, $m,l=0,1,2,\ldots$, and $0
M.B.M.
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Asymptotics of Kummer Hypergeometric Function $_{1}F_{1}(-m,\frac12,-\frac12)$ as $m\rightarrow\infty$

I am trying to find the asymptotic expansion of $_1F_1\left(-m;\frac{1}{2};-\frac{1}{2}\right)$ for large $m$ where $_1F_1\left(a;b;z\right)$ is the Kummer confluent hypergeometric function, also denoted as $M(a,b,z)$ in Chapter 13 Confluent…
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