Appell sequence
In mathematics, an Appell sequence, named after Paul Émile Appell, is any polynomial sequence {pn(x)}n = 0, 1, 2, ... satisfying the identity
and in which p0(x) is a non-zero constant.
Examples
Among the most notable Appell sequences besides the trivial example { xn } are the Hermite polynomials, the Bernoulli polynomials, and the Euler polynomials.
Properties and characterizations
Sheffer sequences
Every Appell sequence is a Sheffer sequence, but not conversely.
Several equivalent characterizations of Appell sequences
The following conditions on polynomial sequences can easily be seen to be equivalent:
- For n = 1, 2, 3, ...,
- and p0(x) is a non-zero constant;
- For some sequence {cn}n = 0, 1, 2, ... of scalars with c0 ≠ 0,
- For the same sequence of scalars,
- where
- For n = 0, 1, 2, ...,
A different convention
Another convention followed by some authors (see Chihara) defines this concept in a different way, coflicting with Appell's original definition, by using the identity
instead.
Subgroup of the Sheffer polynomials
The set of all Appell sequences is closed under the operation of umbral composition of polynomial sequences, defined as follows. Suppose { pn(x) : n = 0, 1, 2, 3, ... } and { qn(x) : n = 0, 1, 2, 3, ... } are polynomial sequences, given by
Then the umbral composition p o q is the polynomial sequence whose nth term is
(the subscript n appears in pn, since this is the n term of that sequence, but not in q, since this refers to the sequence as a whole rather than one of its terms).
Under this operation, the set of all Sheffer sequences is a non-abelian group, but the set of all Appell sequences is an abelian subgroup. That it is abelian can be seen by considering the fact that every Appell sequence is of the form
and that umbral composition of Appell sequences corresponds to multiplication of these formal power series in the operator D.
See also
References
- Paul Appell, "Sur une classe de polynômes", Annales scientifiques de l'É.N.S. 2e série, tome 9, 1880.
- Steven Roman and Gian-Carlo Rota, "The Umbral Calculus", Advances in Mathematics, volume 27, pages 95 - 188, (1978).
- G.-C. Rota, D. Kahaner, and A. Odlyzko, "Finite Operator Calculus," Journal of Mathematical Analysis and its Applications, vol. 42, no. 3, June 1973. Reprinted in the book with the same title, Academic Press, New York, 1975.
- Steven Roman. The Umbral Calculus. Dover Publications.
- Theodore Seio Chihara (1978). An Introduction to Orthogonal Polynomials. Gordon and Breach, New York. ISBN 0-677-04150-0.