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Indefinite sum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In discrete calculus the indefinite sum operator (also known as the antidifference operator), denoted by or ,[1][2] is the linear operator, inverse of the forward difference operator . It relates to the forward difference operator as the indefinite integral relates to the derivative. Thus

More explicitly, if , then

If F(x) is a solution of this functional equation for a given f(x), then so is F(x)+C(x) for any periodic function C(x) with period 1. Therefore, each indefinite sum actually represents a family of functions. However, due to the Carlson's theorem, the solution equal to its Newton series expansion is unique up to an additive constant C. This unique solution can be represented by formal power series form of the antidifference operator: .

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Transcription

Fundamental theorem of discrete calculus

Indefinite sums can be used to calculate definite sums with the formula:[3]

Definitions

Laplace summation formula

where are the Cauchy numbers of the first kind, also known as the Bernoulli Numbers of the Second Kind.[4][citation needed]

Newton's formula

where is the falling factorial.

Faulhaber's formula

Faulhaber's formula provides that the right-hand side of the equation converges.

Mueller's formula

If then[5]

Euler–Maclaurin formula


Choice of the constant term

Often the constant C in indefinite sum is fixed from the following condition.

Let

Then the constant C is fixed from the condition

or

Alternatively, Ramanujan's sum can be used:

or at 1

respectively[6][7]

Summation by parts

Indefinite summation by parts:

Definite summation by parts:

Period rules

If is a period of function then

If is an antiperiod of function , that is then

Alternative usage

Some authors use the phrase "indefinite sum" to describe a sum in which the numerical value of the upper limit is not given:

In this case a closed form expression F(k) for the sum is a solution of

which is called the telescoping equation.[8] It is the inverse of the backward difference operator. It is related to the forward antidifference operator using the fundamental theorem of discrete calculus described earlier.

List of indefinite sums

This is a list of indefinite sums of various functions. Not every function has an indefinite sum that can be expressed in terms of elementary functions.

Antidifferences of rational functions

where , the generalized to real order Bernoulli polynomials.
where is the polygamma function.
where is the digamma function.

Antidifferences of exponential functions

Particularly,

Antidifferences of logarithmic functions

Antidifferences of hyperbolic functions

where is the q-digamma function.

Antidifferences of trigonometric functions

where is the q-digamma function.
where is the normalized sinc function.

Antidifferences of inverse hyperbolic functions

Antidifferences of inverse trigonometric functions

Antidifferences of special functions

where is the incomplete gamma function.
where is the falling factorial.
(see super-exponential function)

See also

References

  1. ^ On Computing Closed Forms for Indefinite Summations. Yiu-Kwong Man. J. Symbolic Computation (1993), 16, 355-376[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "If Y is a function whose first difference is the function y, then Y is called an indefinite sum of y and denoted Δ−1y" Introduction to Difference Equations, Samuel Goldberg
  3. ^ "Handbook of discrete and combinatorial mathematics", Kenneth H. Rosen, John G. Michaels, CRC Press, 1999, ISBN 0-8493-0149-1
  4. ^ Bernoulli numbers of the second kind on Mathworld
  5. ^ Markus Müller. How to Add a Non-Integer Number of Terms, and How to Produce Unusual Infinite Summations Archived 2011-06-17 at the Wayback Machine (note that he uses a slightly alternative definition of fractional sum in his work, i.e. inverse to backwards difference, hence 1 as the lower limit in his formula)
  6. ^ Bruce C. Berndt, Ramanujan's Notebooks Archived 2006-10-12 at the Wayback Machine, Ramanujan's Theory of Divergent Series, Chapter 6, Springer-Verlag (ed.), (1939), pp. 133–149.
  7. ^ Éric Delabaere, Ramanujan's Summation, Algorithms Seminar 2001–2002, F. Chyzak (ed.), INRIA, (2003), pp. 83–88.
  8. ^ Algorithms for Nonlinear Higher Order Difference Equations, Manuel Kauers

Further reading

This page was last edited on 5 April 2024, at 21:20
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