Lerch zeta function
In mathematics, the Lerch zeta-function, sometimes called the Hurwitz–Lerch zeta-function, is a special function that generalizes the Hurwitz zeta-function and the polylogarithm. It is named after the Czech mathematician Mathias Lerch .
Definition
The Lerch zeta-function is given by
A related function, the Lerch transcendent, is given by
The two are related, as
Integral representations
An integral representation is given by
for
A contour integral representation is given by
for
where the contour must not enclose any of the points
A Hermite-like integral representation is given by
for
and
for
Special cases
The Hurwitz zeta-function is a special case, given by
The polylogarithm is a special case of the Lerch Zeta, given by
The Legendre chi function is a special case, given by
The Riemann zeta-function is given by
The Dirichlet eta-function is given by
Identities
For λ rational, the summand is a root of unity, and thus may be expressed as a finite sum over the Hurwitz zeta-function.
Various identities include:
and
and
Series representations
A series representation for the Lerch transcendent is given by
(Note that is a binomial coefficient.)
The series is valid for all s, and for complex z with Re(z)<1/2. Note a general resemblance to a similar series representation for the Hurwitz zeta function.
A Taylor's series in the first parameter was given by Erdélyi. It may be written as the following series, which is valid for
B. R. Johnson (1974). "Generalized Lerch zeta-function". Pacific J. Math 53 (1): 189–193.
If s is a positive integer, then
where is the digamma function.
A Taylor series in the third variable is given by
where is the Pochhammer symbol.
Series at a = -n is given by
A special case for n = 0 has the following series
where is the polylogarithm.
An asymptotic series for
for and
for
An asymptotic series in the incomplete Gamma function
for
Software
The Lerch transcendent is implemented as LerchPhi in Maple.
References
- Apostol, T. M. (2010), "Lerch's Transcendent", in Olver, Frank W. J.; Lozier, Daniel M.; Boisvert, Ronald F.; Clark, Charles W., NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0521192255, MR 2723248.
- Bateman, H.; Erdélyi, A. (1953), Higher Transcendental Functions, Vol. I (PDF), New York: McGraw-Hill. (See § 1.11, "The function Ψ(z,s,v)", p. 27)
- Gradshteyn, Izrail Solomonovich; Ryzhik, Iosif Moiseevich; Geronimus, Yuri Veniaminovich; Tseytlin, Michail Yulyevich; Jeffrey, Alan (2015) [October 2014]. "9.55.". In Zwillinger, Daniel; Moll, Victor Hugo. Table of Integrals, Series, and Products. Translated by Scripta Technica, Inc. (8 ed.). Academic Press, Inc. ISBN 0-12-384933-0. LCCN 2014010276. ISBN 978-0-12-384933-5.
- Guillera, Jesus; Sondow, Jonathan (2008), "Double integrals and infinite products for some classical constants via analytic continuations of Lerch's transcendent", The Ramanujan Journal 16 (3): 247–270, arXiv:math.NT/0506319, doi:10.1007/s11139-007-9102-0, MR 2429900. (Includes various basic identities in the introduction.)
- Jackson, M. (1950), "On Lerch's transcendent and the basic bilateral hypergeometric series 2ψ2", J. London Math. Soc. 25 (3): 189–196, doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-25.3.189, MR 0036882.
- Laurinčikas, Antanas; Garunkštis, Ramūnas (2002), The Lerch zeta-function, Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, ISBN 978-1-4020-1014-9, MR 1979048.
- Lerch, Mathias (1887), "Note sur la fonction ", Acta Mathematica (in French) 11 (1–4): 19–24, doi:10.1007/BF02612318, JFM 19.0438.01, MR 1554747.
External links
- Aksenov, Sergej V.; Jentschura, Ulrich D. (2002), C and Mathematica Programs for Calculation of Lerch's Transcendent.
- Ramunas Garunkstis, Home Page (2005) (Provides numerous references and preprints.)
- Ramunas Garunkstis, Approximation of the Lerch Zeta Function (PDF)
- S. Kanemitsu, Y. Tanigawa and H. Tsukada, A generalization of Bochner's formula, (undated, 2005 or earlier)
- Weisstein, Eric W., "Lerch Transcendent", MathWorld.
- "§25.14, Lerch’s Transcendent". NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions. National Institute of Standards and Technology. 2010. Retrieved 28 January 2012.