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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Veiled Appell Integral

It is well known that: $$\frac{\Gamma(c)}{\Gamma(a) \Gamma(c-a)} \int_0^1 du \, \frac{u^{a-1}(1-u)^{c-a-1}}{(1-ux)^{b_1} (1-uy)^{b_2}} = \mathfrak{F} \, (a; b_1, b_2; c \, | \, x, y) = \\ =\sum_{n = 0}^{\infty} \frac{(a)_n}{(c)_n} \sum_{n_1 + n_2 =…
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GKZ systems of differential equations

Roughly defined, the GKZ (Gelfand-Kapranov-Zelevinsky) systems are classes of differential equations that can be solved in terms of generalised hypergeometric functions - for more details on the subject look e.g. these lecture notes... A simple…
Newbie
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How to write the integral form of a Fox H function when n=p?

I have a questions regarding Fox H functions For a general Fox H function if $n=p$, when we write the integral form, does the term with the product from $p+1$ to $n$ disappear ?
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Motivating Hypergeometric Series

Are there a few 'nice' or 'natural' ways to motivate the existence of the Hypergeometric series $$F(a,b;c:x) = 1 + \frac{ab}{c}x+\frac{1}{2!} \frac{a(a+1)b(b+1)}{c(c+1)}x^2+...?$$ Are there combinatorial or Physics interpretations for example?
bolbteppa
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Negative arguments of hypergeometric functions

I am writing this question because I get bits and pieces of information from hypergeometric function, but it is a bit too hard to learn from scratch. The hypergeometric function, $_2F_1(a,b;c;z)$ is defined as $$ _2F_1(a,b;c;z) = \sum_{i=0}^\infty…
ck1987pd
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how to prove the hypergeometric function ${}_2F_{1}(1,1;2;-x)=\frac{\log(1+x)}{x}$

how do I prove that $$\frac{\log(1+x)}{x}={}_2F_{1}(1,1;2;-x)$$ Here is what I tried $$ {}_2F_{1}(1,1;2;-x)=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}{\frac{(1)_{n}(1)_{n}}{(2)_{n}}(-x)^{n}}$$ next$$(1)_{n}=n!\ \ ,\ \ \ (2)_{n}=(n+1)! $$ $$…
Hisoka
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Proving an integral result for the hypergeometric function

I am currently struggling to find out where the following equation comes from. The authors of the article (Bayer, Friz, Gatheral: Pricing under rough volatility, p.12) where I got it from just wrote it down like it is obvious. Let…
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Expressing the Hypergeometric Function $_3F_2(a,a,b;p,p;x) $ in terms of $_2F_1()$

Is it possible to express the Clausen Hypergeometric Function $_3F_2(a,a,b;p,p;x)$ (the first two parameters and the last two are identical) in terms of the Gauss Hypergeometric Function $_2F_1()$ and Gamma function, with transformed arguments? The…
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Accurate evaluation of ${}_2F_1(-n, 1-x; 2; 2)$

I want to evaluate accurately $f_n(x)={}_2F_1(-n, 1-x; 2; 2)$, where ${}_2F_1$ is the Gauss hypergeometric function. I am interested in the case with $x\in(0,2)$ and $n$ a natural number as large as possible. Fixed $n$, if one expands $f_n(x)$, it…
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Simplify Sum of Hypergeometric Functions

Write the following "sum" in terms of $\,_2F_1(a,b;c;z)$: $$ _2 F_1(a,b+1;c+1;z) +\, _2 F_1(a,b-1;c-1;z) -\, _2 F_1(a,b;c;z).$$ Attempt: I played around with identities in here. In particular, to make necessary transformation, I had to take…
JeffPan
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Evaluating $\lim_{\epsilon\to 0^{+}}\ \frac{ _2F_1\left( \tfrac{1}{2} - \nu, \tfrac{1}{2} + \nu; \epsilon; y \right) }{\Gamma(\epsilon)}$

For $\nu \in \mathbb{C}$ and negative $y<0$ is there a way to compute the limit $$ f(\nu,y) \equiv \lim_{\epsilon \to 0^{+}} \ \frac{ _2F_1\left( \tfrac{1}{2} - \nu, \tfrac{1}{2} + \nu; \epsilon; y \right) }{\Gamma(\epsilon)} $$ in terms of simpler…
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An identity for generalized hypergeometric function

I think the following identity is true, $$ \frac{4 (4 s+9)}{3 \Gamma \left(s+\frac{5}{2}\right) \Gamma \left(s+\frac{7}{2}\right)}-\frac{16 (s+2)}{3 \Gamma (s+3)^2}=\frac{\, _3F_2\left(2,s+\frac{5}{2},s+\frac{7}{2};s+4,s+5;1\right)}{\Gamma (s+4)…
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Simplifying specific $\,_4F_3$ hypergeometric function?

Consider the hypergeometric function $$\,_4F_3\left({{a,b+n,c-n,d}\atop{a+1,b,c}};1\right)$$ with $a,b,c,d\in\mathbb{C}$ and $n\in\mathbb{N}$. Is there any way to simplify it to bits and pieces that are of lower complexity? Thanks for any…
Kagaratsch
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Hypergeometric, selecting together or one by one?

In hypergeometric distribution the following info is given to us. There are $N$ objects out of which $r$ objects are desirable and $N-r$ undesirable. To select $x$ objects from $r$ and $n-x$ objects from $N-r$ we apply hypergeometric distribution…
user90596
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Can we solve the following equation for $x$?

I have following equation to solve for $x$ $$k-ax^2\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{(-x^mb)^n}{(1+tn)}(1-u^{-n})=0$$ where $k$ is a real number, $a,b,t,u$ are positive constants. Any ideas will be very helpful. Thanks in advance. (Also please add the…
Frank Moses
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