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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Derivation of Kummer's identity

I have to derive Kummer’s identity $$e^x\operatorname{M}\left(c-a,c;-x\right)=\operatorname{M}\left(a,c;x\right)$$ from Pfaff’s…
Hisoka
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Can you tell which are correct terms of the sum of solution of the integral $\int (x^2+1)^n dx $?

According to WolframAlpha, $$\int (x^2+1)^n dx = x \cdot _2F_1(\frac{1}{2},-n;\frac{1}{3};-x^2)$$ and $$_2F_1(\frac{1}{2},-n;\frac{1}{3};-x^2)= \sum_{n=0}^{\infty} \frac{1}{3}(-n)\frac{(-x^2)^n}{n!}.$$ Can you tell which are correct terms of the…
user2723
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Looking for a hypergeometric 2F1 identity

I'm trying to express $$_2F_1\left(\frac{1}{2} , 1;\,\frac{3}{2}+m;\,z\right), \quad m\in\mathbb{Z}\quad\text{and}\quad m\geq0$$ in terms of $\tanh^{-1}(\sqrt{z})$ and $\sqrt{z}$, basically generalizing these results. Any ideas?
lel
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Confluent hyper-geometric function

Is there any identity in the confluent hypergeometric function that connects the following? ${}_1{F_1}\left( {a + n + 1,b + n + 1, - c} \right)$ and ${}_1{F_1}\left( {a + 1,b + 1, - c} \right)$ where a, b and c are positive real numbers
user827039
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Upper bound on hypergeometric function ${}_2F_1$

I wonder if the following upper bound holds: $${}_2F_1[-m, -m; -(m+l); z]\leq 1,\tag{1}$$ 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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Prove absolute convergence of hypergeometric series

When we try to prove the hypergeometric series $F(a,b;c;z)=\sum_{n=0}^\infty\frac{a_{(n)} b_{(n)}}{c_{(n)}n!}z^n$ converge absolutely when $R(a+b-c)<0$, we use that $ \frac{n}{c+n-1}=1-\frac{c-1}{n}+O(\frac{ 1}{n^2})$. (Without that we need to…
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Hypergeometric function/series motivation and vs. Taylor expansion

The real and complex hypergeometric series $F(a,b;c;z)=\sum_{n=0}^\infty\frac{a_{(n)} b_{(n)}}{c_{(n)}n!}z^n$ is absolutely convergent when the real part of $a+b-c-1$ is less than $-1$. It has several applications in differential equation and…
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Independent Check of Wolfram's Evaluation of the Clausen ($_3F_2$) Hypergeometric Function

Could someone be kind enough to independently verify the calculations of the Generalised Hypergeometric Function (Hypergeometric3F2) at http://functions.wolfram.com/webMathematica/FunctionEvaluation.jsp?name=Hypergeometric3F2 With my spreadsheet…
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Formula for ${}_2F_1(h,-n, 2h; 2)$.

Does anyone know a closed form for the following evaluations of the Hypergeometric function $$ {}_2F_1(h,-n, 2h; t^{-1}) $$ with $h>0,n\geq 0$ both integers and $0\leq t\leq 1$ a real. For the most part I'm interested in $t=1/2$ case. Context: I…
Hamed
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Connection Formula for Hypergeometric Function 2F1

Suppose I have the function $_2F_1\left(a,b;c;x^2\right)$ with $a=\frac{3}{4}+\frac{k}{4}$, $b=\frac{3}{4}-\frac{k}{4}$ and $c=\frac{1}{2}$. I want to know the behaviour about $x=1.\,$ I go to DLMF equation 15.10.21 and choose $$ w_1\left(x^2\right)…
Diger
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Connection formula for the Gauss hypergeometric function from $\frac{1}{z}$ to $z$

I want to understand better the following connection formula: ${}_2F_1\left[\begin{matrix}a,b \\ c \end{matrix};\frac{1}{z}\right]=e^{-i \pi a}z^{a}\frac{\Gamma \left[b-a \right]\Gamma \left[c\right]}{\Gamma \left[b\right]\Gamma…
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Simplifying a hypergeometric function

Why $$(1-z)^{1+a}~_2F_1(1+(m+1)a, 2+a; 2+(m+1)a;z)$$ can be simplified to $$_2F_1(1, ma, 2+(m+1)a;z)$$ ? The above step comes from: https://arxiv.org/pdf/cond-mat/0004434.pdf Thanks.
karak
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Hypergeometric expansion approximation

We've identified a bug in our hypergeometric function, where the approximation that we're using fails. Basically, we approximate hyp2f1(a, b, c, x) where b==c and |x| < 1.0 as (1.0 - x)^(-a). However, this approximation seems to fail when b is a…
xaav
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the Confluent Hypergeometric Function of the 1st Kind

I need to do integration $$\int_0^\infty e^{-z~\text{cosh}(2u)-\frac{1}{y}u^2}~\text{M}\bigg(-\mu,\frac{3}{2},2z~\text{sinh}(u)^2 \bigg)~ \text{sinh}(2u)~\text{sin}\bigg(\frac{\pi u}{y} \bigg)du $$ where $\text{M}(a,b,c)$ represents the Confluent…
Smirk
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A problem with the proof of the equality.

I have two confluent hypergeometric functions $$A=M(\alpha, 1; e^{i\omega{t}})$$ and $$B=M(\beta, 1; e^{i\omega{t}})$$ Where $$M(a, b, z)=\sum_{k=0}^{\infty}\frac{(a)_{k}}{(b)_{k}k!}z^{k}$$ It seems obvious to me that $$\bar{A}B=A\bar{B}$$ Can…