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Generalization of the Euler gamma function and the Barnes G-function
For derivatives of the log of the gamma function, see polygamma function.
Plot of the Barnes G aka double gamma function G(z) in the complex plane from -2-2i to 2+2i with colors created with Mathematica 13.1 function ComplexPlot3D
In mathematics, the multiple gamma function is a generalization of the Euler gamma function and the Barnes G-function. The double gamma function was studied by Barnes (1901). At the end of this paper he mentioned the existence of multiple gamma functions generalizing it, and studied these further in Barnes (1904).
where is the Barnes zeta function. (This differs by a constant from Barnes's original definition.)
Properties
Considered as a meromorphic function of , has no zeros. It has poles at for non-negative integers . These poles are simple unless some of them coincide. Up to multiplication by the exponential of a polynomial, is the unique meromorphic function of finite order with these zeros and poles.
In the case of the double Gamma function, the asymptotic behaviour for is known, and the leading factor is[1]
Infinite product representation
The multiple gamma function has an infinite product representation that makes it manifest that it is meromorphic, and that also makes the positions of its poles manifest. In the case of the double gamma function, this representation is [2]
where we define the -independent coefficients
where is an -th order residue at .
Another representation as a product over leads to an algorithm for numerically computing the double Gamma function.[1]
Reduction to the Barnes G-function
The double gamma function with parameters obeys the relations [2]
Barnes, E. W. (1901), "The Theory of the Double Gamma Function", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical or Physical Character, 196 (274–286): 265–387, Bibcode:1901RSPTA.196..265B, doi:10.1098/rsta.1901.0006, ISSN0264-3952, JSTOR90809
Barnes, E. W. (1904), "On the theory of the multiple gamma function", Trans. Camb. Philos. Soc., 19: 374–425