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ORTHOGONA HYPERGEOMETRIC SERIES RECURRENCE RELATIONS AND SOME NEW ORTHOGONA WILSON, JAMES JANIES ARTHUR ProQuest Dissertations and Theses; 1978; 1978; ProQuest
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' WILSON, James Arthur, 1951HYPERGEOMETRIC SERIES RECURRENCE RELATIONS AND SOME NEW ORTHOGONAL FUNCTIONS
The University of Wisconsin—Madison, Ph.D., 1978 Mathematics
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HYPERGEOME‘I‘RIC
ENCE RELATIONS SERIES RECURR
CTIONS ORTHOGONAL FUN AND SOME NEW te School of the ed to the Gradua A thesis submitt illment of in partial fulf consin—Madison University of Wis losophy of Doctor of Phi ts for the degree the requiremen 3!
WILSON JAMES ARTHUR
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S HYPEMBOMETRIC SERIES RECURRENCE RELATION AND SOME NEW ORTHOGONAL FUNCTIONS
A thesis submitted to the Graduate School of the
University of Wisconsin—Madison in partial fulfillment of
the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
3!
ARTHUR WILSON——-—-— JAMES ____——— ______.__
Degree to be awarded:
Decanber 19
May 19
August 19.73..
Approved by Thesis Reading Committee:
(Mm Clo/55%
Major Professor
mm Is, Im
Date df Examination
Dean, Jeraduate School /
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HYPERGEOMETRIC SERIES RECURRENCE RELATIONS AND SOME NEW ORTHDGONAL FUNCTIONS
by JAMES ARTHUR WILSON
A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (Mathematics)
at the
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON
1978
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
. . . . . . ii
. . . .
.
. . . .
I.
INTRODUCTION. . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
. . . . . . .
II.
4173 POLYNOMIAL ORTHOGONALITIES. . . .
. . . .
. . . . . . . 14
. . . .
. . . .
. . . . . . . 31
THREE—TERM CONTIGUOUS RELATIONS . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . 43
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. .
. . . . . . . .
III. GRAM DETERMINANTS . . . . . .
IV.
. . .
1
BIBLIOGRAPHY..........................62
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
For creating the atmosphere in which all the ideas in this thesis
sprang up inevitably, my gratitude goes to Professor Richard Askey. I also wish to thank Professors Dennis Stanton and George Andrews for
their valuable contributions to this environment, my parents and my wife Rosemary for their understanding and encouragement, and the fol-
lowing people for their inspiring examples:
Burl Cannon and Professors
Raymond Redheffet, Kirby Baker, Basil Gordon, Richard Arena, Alfred Hales, Theodore Motzkin, and Carl deBoor.
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I.
INTRODUCTION
This thesis is largely the result of efforts to better understand
the connection between hypergeometric series and orthogonal polynomials.
A hypergeomerric series is a series
(a1)k...(a )k
W
al,...,a ;
P
F p q(b1,...,bq
E (b) qk (1) k 1k ...(b) k—O
-
2)
2
k
with (a)k = a(a+1)...(a+k—1) if k 1 1, and (a)o = 1.
shifted factorial, since (1)k = M. and for ‘2] < 1 if q = p—l.
,
We call (a)k a
It converges for all z if q 1 p;
Orthogonal polynomials for which explicit
symbolic Calculations can be carried out due to the availability of
explicit formulas such as orthogonality relations, recurrence rela— tions, and differential or difference equations, seem invariably to involve hypergeometric series or q-series, generalizations of hyper—
geometric series.
The polynomials can be expressed as hypergeometric
series or q—series, and their properties are consequences of hypergeometric series theorems or their q—extensions.
This situation is
perhaps not so surprising, since a hypergeometric series is simply an
s
infinite series
2
t
k
with
t k+1 Itk a rational function of k, and
series more complicated than this are difficult to work with. (Excep—
tions are the q—series, which have tk+litk a rational function of qk. Many theorems for hypergeometric series generalize to q—series.)
However, what is more striking is that nearly all the special types of hypergeometric series for which summation or transformation
formulas exist are involved in an essential way with some orthogonal
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polynomials .
In the first chapter, we elaborate on these ideas while giving necessary background information on hypergeometric series and ortho-
General references for most of the orthogonal
gonal polynomials.
polynomial information are Erdélyi [5], volume 2, and Szegfi [11].
Hypergeometric series references are Bailey [1] and Erdélyi [5], volume 1.
In succeeding chapters, we introduce some new families
of orthogonal polynomials and biorthogonal rational functions whose
basic properties involve the deeper series identities, including some new three-series relations.
series.
We will not be concerned here with q-
Extensions to q-series are being worked out for all the new
results in this thesis. The orthogonal polynomials known most widely are the classical
polynomials named for Jacobi, Laguerre and Hermite, with the following
explicit representations and orthogonality relations: Jacobi Eolmmials:
((2,8) Pn (x)
_ _
(n+1) n!
n
-n,n+o+B+1; l—_x 2F1(o+l 2) ’
(1,3 > —1, n 1 0;
(1.1)
( e) (1:) dx - o, m 54 11 ; ( ) (x) rm“ f1 (l—x)a(1+x)BPnu’B -1
Laguerre nolflomials:
Lga>(n+s) , (2n+a+6)2
’
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(,5) d (x) 5911“
(1.3)
a
. n+u+8+1 (a+1,B+l) (x) ’ Pn—l 2
(1-x2)Cld—z' 2‘“ ”(2‘) + [s-a-(oc+8+2)x] E v§“'5)(x) + d2
(1.4)
+n(n+oc+5+1) 9(Q’B)(x) - 0; and
(3—1)“ —{(1-x°‘)*“(1+x)“*“}. (1—x)“(1+x)BP§“’B’(x) = 2n11! flat“
(1.5)
There are other orthogonal polynomials which make very nice dis—
crete analogs of the classical polynomials.
They satisfy similar
explicit formulas in which the derivative operator i: replaced by
the ordinary difference operator Af(x) = f(x+1) - f(x).
These poly-
nomials and their orthogonality relations are:
Hahn polynomials :
_
_
-n ,n+o,+8+1,-x-
Qn(x’°’s’m ' 3F2(u+1,-N
' 1) ’
a,S>-loro.,B0,0\—ix) .
We introduce in chapter two some new orthogonal polynomials, represented by AF3'S’ which include as limiting cases all the polynomials discussed so far and others as well.
Among the others are the
dual Hahn polynomials, obtained by interchanging n and x in Qu(x;o,B,N):
Rn(A(X);u.B.N)
=
(-n , -x , x+a+B+l ;
31’ 2 o.+1,—N
01,3 > --1 or 0.,5 < —N, 0 i n i N.
1) ’
These are polynomials of degree n in
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B the variable Mx)
-
x(x+a+8+l).
Ketlin and McGregor's orthogonality
relation [7] is
(1. 13)
N (mu)x (“g“)x(e.+1)x(-mx(—1)x 2: x=0 (1)x\(x);a,B,N)Rm(A(x);u.S,N)
0,
ma‘n.
The recurrence relation and difference equation for the Hahn polynomials are, respectively, the difference equation and recurrence
relation for their duals.
As consequences of properties of the 51:3
polynomials, the dual Hahn's satisfy some previously unnoticed ortho-
gonality relations (with conditions on the parameters different from
those above) and Rodrigues—type formulas. Special cases of the 4F3 polynomial orthogonalities have appeared
in the quantum mechanical theory of angular momentum as Racah's
orthogonality for 6-j symbols (see [9]).
However, the orthogonality
was recognized as a polynomial orthogonality only in very special
cases (Biedenharn et a1 [4], p. 253).
This is discussed further in
chapter two. We now consider the types of hypergeometric series which satisfy useful explicit formulas and mention some of the ways they tie in
with known orthogonal polynomials.
We are concerned mainly with 17+l
formulas, since the important formulas for other PF '5 are limiting
cases of these.
Examples:
ting a -> w gives (1.1h).
(1) Replacing x in (1.15) by x/a and let— (2) The Jacobi polynomial orthogonality, with
a change of variable, becomes an orthogonality for the polynomials
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9
2F1(;:in+a+5+1; x/B). orthogonality.
Letting B 9 +0 gives the Laguerre polynomial
(3) Szego ([11], section 8.1) shows how properties of
Bessel functions, 0171's, are consequences of properties of Jacobi polynomials . OFO I s and 1F0 u s are trivial..
(1.14)
03°C; x) - ex,
and
(1.15)
r (a; x) - (1-1:)‘3 .
l 0 -
These formulas give the total masses of the weight functions for the
Charlier, Meixner and Krawtchouk polynomials. 2171's, which are well represented among the polynomials listed,
satisfy quite a few important identities.
There are transformation
formulas called linear transformations, which include the symmetries
p“1“(1—p)“xn(N-x;1-p,m and
93"” (x) = (-1)“rt(15’°‘)(—x) There are quadratic transformations for 21’1'5 with various conditions
on the parameters.
One of these gives
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10
(Zn)!
(a,u)
(n+1)2n 1,2n
_ (x)
n!
_
(m,-2)
(u+l)n Pn
(2x2-l) '
sh; z), the hypergeometrit equation, The differential equation for 2F1(c’ is just (1.4) with a change of variable.
. a.b; 2) give
2Fl(c
(1.16)
Differentiation formulas for
(1.3) and
(1—x)“(1+x)31=§°"8)(x) =
-i i {(140 (1+1 (1+x) “11,211, 3+1) (1‘)} 211 dx
'
Iterating (1.16) n times yields the Rodrigues formula (1.5).
But the
formulas occurring most frequently among the polynomial properties are
Gauss's contiguous relations (see [6] or [5], volume 1) and simple con— sequences of them.
These are three-term identities which include
orthogonal polynomial recurrence relations and difference analogs of
(1.3), (1.4), and (1.16).
When 2 = 1, the ZFl can be evaluated by
Gauss ' s theorem:
(1'1”
.
Ewe—vb) 2F1(c3:1“; 1) _‘ i‘(c-a)I‘(c—-b)
(provided Re(c~a-b) > 0, so the series converges).
The terminating
series version,
-mb;
2F1(c
_
(c-b)
1) ’ 735‘“ 11
gives the total mass of the Hahn polynomial weight function. Most interesting 3F2 formulas are for series with z = 1, and
p+1FP formulas heyong this level require restrictions on the parameters.
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11 ao,al, . . . ,a ; P l) is called a k—balanced series if (1) The series 'p+1F1)b1,...,bp
b1+...+b —-a°a1-...-aP = k and one of ao,...,ap is a nonposnzive integer.
(Similar series without the terminating condition satisfy
more complicated identities which so far have not been useful.)
k = l, the series is called simply a balanced series.
called well—poised if a1 + bl =
= ap + bl, = a0 + 1.
If
The series is
It 15 very
well poised if, in addition, b1 - 190.
An extension of (1.17) needed in chapter two is the PEaff-Saal— schutz theorem:
(1.18)
—n,eh ,c; 1) P'(r1 3 2d
a
(d-b)n(d-C)n ——(d)n(d—b-C)n
,
provided the series is balanced.
The linear transformations and contiguous relations for ZFl'S generalize successively to 3 F 2 's with z = l, to balanced [aF 3 's, and to 2-balanced, very well poised 9FB' s.
(Note that the number of
free parameters increases by one at each stage.)
The 31:2 transfor—
mations contain the Hahn polynomial symmetry
(u+l)n Qn(x;u,B,N) = (-1)“ 1‘ (—N+s)
(a—(z‘i—1)N(a-cl+1)N
Then divide
As 5 —> 0, the integral term
0, and the result may be written
N
(2a) k(a+1) k (a+b)k(a+c) k(a+d)k
(23+1)N(l-c—d)N RED (1)k(s)k(a-b+l)k(a-c+l)k(a—d+1)k
(2‘11)
- pn((a+k)2)pm((a+k)2) n! (n+a+b+c+d—l)n (a+b)n (a+c)n(a+d) n (i:v+€:)n (134%)“ (c+d)n m,n
(a+b+c+d) 2n
Interchanging a and b here is equivalent to summing in the reverse
order.
(2.11) can also be proven directly from the 5174 formula (1.24)
just as (2.6) is proven from (2.3). Necessary and sufficient conditions on a,b,c,d for the positivity
of the weights in (2.11) are quite messy, but some sufficient conditions are
(2.12)
a+b = —N, b < )5 < a, -a < c < a+1, and either d > —b or d < b+1
Of course, interchanging a and b in (2.12) also gives sufficient
conditions for positivity. We now describe how, as claimed in chapter one, many orthogonality relations for previously known polynomials are included in the AFB or—
thogonalities as limiting cases.
The appropriate limit processes can
usually be determined by comparing the hypergeometrie series represent-
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24 It sometimes helps to write the AF3 poly—
ations of the polynomials.
nomials, with a change of variable and parameters, as
(2.13) with A(x)
_ rn(x(x),u.s.v.6)
=
-n n-i-u+B+1 -x x+v+6+l' ’ 1) 4F3(a+i,e+s+1.§+1’
x(x+'y+6+l).
=
Then (2 .11) becomes
(2. 14)
(TI-5+1) k ( y"3"3)k