Bessel function
In mathematics, Bessel functions, first defined by the mathematician Daniel Bernoulli and generalized by Friedrich Bessel, are canonical solutions y(x) of Bessel's differential equation:
for an arbitrary real or complex number α (the order of the Bessel function); the most common and important cases are for α an integer or half-integer.
Although α and −α produce the same differential equation, it is conventional to define different Bessel functions for these two orders (e.g., so that the Bessel functions are mostly smooth functions of α). Bessel functions are also known as cylinder functions or cylindrical harmonics because they are found in the solution to Laplace's equation in cylindrical coordinates.
Applications of Bessel function
Bessel's equation arises when finding separable solutions to Laplace's equation and the Helmholtz equation in cylindrical or spherical coordinates. Bessel functions are therefore especially important for many problems of wave propagation and static potentials. In solving problems in cylindrical coordinate systems, one obtains Bessel functions of integer order (α = n); in spherical problems, one obtains half-integer orders (α = n + ½). For example:
- Electromagnetic waves in a cylindrical waveguide
- Heat conduction in a cylindrical object
- Modes of vibration of a thin circular (or annular) artificial membrane (such as a drum or other membranophone)
- Diffusion problems on a lattice
- Solutions to the radial Schrödinger equation (in spherical and cylindrical coordinates) for a free particle
- Solving for patterns of acoustical radiation
Bessel functions also have useful properties for other problems, such as signal processing (e.g., see FM synthesis, Kaiser window, or Bessel filter).
Definitions
Since this is a second-order differential equation, there must be two linearly independent solutions. Depending upon the circumstances, however, various formulations of these solutions are convenient, and the different variations are described below.
Bessel functions of the first kind : Jα
Bessel functions of the first kind, denoted as Jα(x), are solutions of Bessel's differential equation that are finite at the origin (x = 0) for integer α, and diverge as x approaches zero for negative non-integer α. The solution type (e.g., integer or non-integer) and normalization of Jα(x) are defined by its properties below. It is possible to define the function by its Taylor series expansion around x = 0:[1]
where Γ(z) is the gamma function, a generalization of the factorial function to non-integer values. The graphs of Bessel functions look roughly like oscillating sine or cosine functions that decay proportionally to 1/√x (see also their asymptotic forms below), although their roots are not generally periodic, except asymptotically for large x. (The Taylor series indicates that −J1(x) is the derivative of J0(x), much like −sin x is the derivative of cos x; more generally, the derivative of Jn(x) can be expressed in terms of Jn±1(x) by the identities below.)
For non-integer α, the functions Jα(x) and J−α(x) are linearly independent, and are therefore the two solutions of the differential equation. On the other hand, for integer order α, the following relationship is valid (note that the Gamma function becomes infinite for negative integer arguments):[2]
This means that the two solutions are no longer linearly independent. In this case, the second linearly independent solution is then found to be the Bessel function of the second kind, as discussed below.
Bessel's integrals
Another definition of the Bessel function, for integer values of , is possible using an integral representation:
Another integral representation is:
This was the approach that Bessel used, and from this definition he derived several properties of the function. The definition may be extended to non-integer orders by (for )
Relation to hypergeometric series
The Bessel functions can be expressed in terms of the generalized hypergeometric series as[citation needed]
This expression is related to the development of Bessel functions in terms of the Bessel–Clifford function.
Relation to Laguerre polynomials
In terms of the Laguerre polynomials and arbitrarily chosen parameter , the Bessel function can be expressed as[7]
Bessel functions of the second kind : Yα
The Bessel functions of the second kind, denoted by Yα(x), occasionally denoted instead by Nα(x), are solutions of the Bessel differential equation. They have a singularity at the origin (x = 0). These are sometimes called Weber functions after Heinrich Martin Weber, and also Neumann functions after Carl Neumann.
For non-integer α, Yα(x) is related to Jα(x) by:
In the case of integer order n, the function is defined by taking the limit as a non-integer α tends to n:
There is also a corresponding integral formula (for ),[8]
Yα(x) is necessary as the second linearly independent solution of the Bessel's equation when α is an integer. But Yα(x) has more meaning than that. It can be considered as a 'natural' partner of Jα(x). See also the subsection on Hankel functions below.
When α is an integer, moreover, as was similarly the case for the functions of the first kind, the following relationship is valid:
Both Jα(x) and Yα(x) are holomorphic functions of x on the complex plane cut along the negative real axis. When α is an integer, the Bessel functions J are entire functions of x. If x is held fixed, then the Bessel functions are entire functions of α.
Hankel functions: Hα(1), Hα(2)
Another important formulation of the two linearly independent solutions to Bessel's equation are the Hankel functions Hα(1)(x) and Hα(2)(x), defined by:[9]
where i is the imaginary unit. These linear combinations are also known as Bessel functions of the third kind; they are two linearly independent solutions of Bessel's differential equation. They are named after Hermann Hankel.
The importance of Hankel functions of the first and second kind lies more in theoretical development rather than in application. These forms of linear combination satisfy numerous simple-looking properties, like asymptotic formulae or integral representations. Here, 'simple' means an appearance of the factor of the form . The Bessel function of the second kind then can be thought to naturally appear as the imaginary part of the Hankel functions.
The Hankel functions are used to express outward- and inward-propagating cylindrical wave solutions of the cylindrical wave equation, respectively (or vice versa, depending on the sign convention for the frequency).
Using the previous relationships they can be expressed as:
if α is an integer, the limit has to be calculated. The following relationships are valid, whether α is an integer or not:[10]
The Hankel functions admit the following integral representations for :[11]
where the integration limits indicate integration along a contour that can be chosen as follows: from −∞ to 0 along the negative real axis, from 0 to ±iπ along the imaginary axis, and from ±iπ to +∞±iπ along a contour parallel to the real axis.[12]
Modified Bessel functions : Iα, Kα
The Bessel functions are valid even for complex arguments x, and an important special case is that of a purely imaginary argument. In this case, the solutions to the Bessel equation are called the modified Bessel functions (or occasionally the hyperbolic Bessel functions) of the first and second kind, and are defined by any of these equivalent alternatives:[13]
These are chosen to be real-valued for real and positive arguments x. The series expansion for Iα(x) is thus similar to that for Jα(x), but without the alternating (−1)m factor.
Iα(x) and Kα(x) are the two linearly independent solutions to the modified Bessel's equation:[14]
Unlike the ordinary Bessel functions, which are oscillating as functions of a real argument, Iα and Kα are exponentially growing and decaying functions, respectively. Like the ordinary Bessel function Jα, the function Iα goes to zero at x = 0 for α > 0 and is finite at x = 0 for α = 0. Analogously, Kα diverges at x = 0.
Two integral formulas for the modified Bessel functions are (for ):[15]
Modified Bessel functions and can be represented in terms of rapidly converged integrals[16]
The modified Bessel function of the second kind has also been called by the now-rare names:
- Basset function after Alfred Barnard Basset
- Modified Bessel function of the third kind
- Modified Hankel function[17]
- Macdonald function after Hector Munro Macdonald
- Weber function[18]
- Neumann function[19]
Spherical Bessel functions: jn, yn
When solving the Helmholtz equation in spherical coordinates by separation of variables, the radial equation has the form:
The two linearly independent solutions to this equation are called the spherical Bessel functions jn and yn, and are related to the ordinary Bessel functions Jn and Yn by:[20]
is also denoted or ηn; some authors call these functions the spherical Neumann functions.
The spherical Bessel functions can also be written as (Rayleigh's Formulas):[21]
The first spherical Bessel function is also known as the (unnormalized) sinc function. The first few spherical Bessel functions are:
and
Generating function
The spherical Bessel functions have the generating functions [24]
Differential relations
In the following is any of for
Spherical Hankel functions: hn
There are also spherical analogues of the Hankel functions:
In fact, there are simple closed-form expressions for the Bessel functions of half-integer order in terms of the standard trigonometric functions, and therefore for the spherical Bessel functions. In particular, for non-negative integers n:
and is the complex-conjugate of this (for real ). It follows, for example, that and , and so on.
The spherical Hankel functions appear in problems involving spherical wave propagation, for example in the multipole expansion of the electromagnetic field.
Riccati–Bessel functions: Sn, Cn, ξn, ζn
Riccati–Bessel functions only slightly differ from spherical Bessel functions:
They satisfy the differential equation:
This differential equation, and the Riccati–Bessel solutions, arises in the problem of scattering of electromagnetic waves by a sphere, known as Mie scattering after the first published solution by Mie (1908). See e.g., Du (2004)[26] for recent developments and references.
Following Debye (1909), the notation is sometimes used instead of .
Asymptotic forms
The Bessel functions have the following asymptotic forms for non-negative α. For small arguments , one obtains:[27]
where is the Euler–Mascheroni constant (0.5772...) and denotes the gamma function. For large arguments , they become:[27]
(For α=1/2 these formulas are exact; see the spherical Bessel functions above.) Asymptotic forms for the other types of Bessel function follow straightforwardly from the above relations. For example, for large , the modified Bessel functions become:
Similarly, the last expressions are exact when .
For small arguments , they become:
Properties
For integer order α = n, Jn is often defined via a Laurent series for a generating function:
an approach used by P. A. Hansen in 1843. (This can be generalized to non-integer order by contour integration or other methods.) Another important relation for integer orders is the Jacobi–Anger expansion:
and
which is used to expand a plane wave as a sum of cylindrical waves, or to find the Fourier series of a tone-modulated FM signal.
More generally, a series
is called Neumann expansion of ƒ. The coefficients for have the explicit form
where is Neumann's polynomial.[30]
Selected functions admit the special representation
with
due to the orthogonality relation
More generally, if ƒ has a branch-point near the origin of such a nature that then
or
where is ƒ's Laplace transform.[31]
Another way to define the Bessel functions is the Poisson representation formula and the Mehler-Sonine formula:
where ν > −1/2 and z is a complex number.[32] This formula is useful especially when working with Fourier transforms.
The functions Jα, Yα, Hα(1), and Hα(2) all satisfy the recurrence relations:
where Z denotes J, Y, H(1), or H(2). (These two identities are often combined, e.g. added or subtracted, to yield various other relations.) In this way, for example, one can compute Bessel functions of higher orders (or higher derivatives) given the values at lower orders (or lower derivatives). In particular, it follows that:
Modified Bessel functions follow similar relations :
and
The recurrence relation reads
where Cα denotes Iα or eαπiKα. These recurrence relations are useful for discrete diffusion problems.
Because Bessel's equation becomes Hermitian (self-adjoint) if it is divided by x, the solutions must satisfy an orthogonality relationship for appropriate boundary conditions. In particular, it follows that:
where α > −1, δm,n is the Kronecker delta, and uα,m is the m-th zero of Jα(x). This orthogonality relation can then be used to extract the coefficients in the Fourier–Bessel series, where a function is expanded in the basis of the functions Jα(x uα,m) for fixed α and varying m.
An analogous relationship for the spherical Bessel functions follows immediately:
Another orthogonality relation is the closure equation:[33]
for α > −1/2 and where δ is the Dirac delta function. This property is used to construct an arbitrary function from a series of Bessel functions by means of the Hankel transform. For the spherical Bessel functions the orthogonality relation is:
for α > −1.
Another important property of Bessel's equations, which follows from Abel's identity, involves the Wronskian of the solutions:
where Aα and Bα are any two solutions of Bessel's equation, and Cα is a constant independent of x (which depends on α and on the particular Bessel functions considered). For example, if Aα = Jα and Bα = Yα, then Cα is 2/π. This also holds for the modified Bessel functions; for example, if Aα = Iα and Bα = Kα, then Cα is −1.
(There are a large number of other known integrals and identities that are not reproduced here, but which can be found in the references.)
Multiplication theorem
The Bessel functions obey a multiplication theorem
where and may be taken as arbitrary complex numbers. A similar form may be given for and so on.[34] [35]
Bourget's hypothesis
Bessel himself originally proved that for non-negative integers n, the equation Jn(x) = 0 has an infinite number of solutions in x.[36] When the functions Jn(x) are plotted on the same graph, though, none of the zeros seem to coincide for different values of n except for the zero at x = 0. This phenomenon is known as Bourget's hypothesis after the nineteenth century French mathematician who studied Bessel functions. Specifically it states that for any integers n ≥ 0 and m ≥ 1, the functions Jn(x) and Jn+m(x) have no common zeros other than the one at x = 0. The hypothesis was proved by Carl Ludwig Siegel in 1929.[37]
Selected identities
See also
- Anger function
- Bessel–Clifford function
- Bessel polynomials
- Fourier–Bessel series
- Frequency Modulation
- Hahn–Exton q-Bessel function
- Hankel transform
- Jackson q-Bessel function
- Kelvin functions
- Lommel functions
- Lommel polynomial
- Neumann polynomial
- Propagator
- Struve function
- Vibrations of a circular drum
- Weber function
- Wright generalized Bessel function
Notes
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 360, 9.1.10.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 358, 9.1.5.
- ^ Watson, p. 176
- ^ http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/~gerlach/math/BVtypset/node122.html
- ^ http://www.nbi.dk/~polesen/borel/node15.html
- ^ Arfken & Weber, exercise 11.1.17.
- ^ Szegö, G. Orthogonal Polynomials, 4th ed. Providence, RI: Amer. Math. Soc., 1975.
- ^ Watson, p. 178.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 358, 9.1.3, 9.1.4.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 358, 9.1.6.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 360, 9.1.25.
- ^ Watson, p. 178
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 375, 9.6.2, 9.6.10, 9.6.11.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 374, 9.6.1.
- ^ Watson, p. 181.
- ^ M.Kh.Khokonov. Cascade Processes of Energy Loss by Emission of Hard Photons, JETP, V.99, No.4, pp. 690-707 (2004). Derived from formulas sourced to I. S. Gradshteĭn and I. M. Ryzhik, Table of Integrals, Series, and Products (Fizmatgiz, Moscow, 1963; Academic, New York, 1980).
- ^ Referred to as such in: Teichroew, D. The Mixture of Normal Distributions with Different Variances, The Annals of Mathematical Statistics. Vol. 28, No. 2 (Jun., 1957), pp. 510–512
- ^ http://www.mhtlab.uwaterloo.ca/courses/me755/web_chap4.pdf
- ^ http://www.mhtlab.uwaterloo.ca/courses/me755/web_chap4.pdf
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 437, 10.1.1.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 439, 10.1.25, 10.1.26;
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 438, 10.1.11.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 438, 10.1.12;
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 439, 10.1.39.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 439, 10.1.23.
- ^ Hong Du, "Mie-scattering calculation," Applied Optics 43 (9), 1951–1956 (2004)
- ^ a b Arfken & Weber.
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 377, 9.7.1;
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 378, 9.7.2;
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 363, 9.1.82 ff.
- ^ E. T. Whittaker, G. N. Watson, A course in modern Analysis p. 536
- ^ I.S. Gradshteyn (И.С. Градштейн), I.M. Ryzhik (И.М. Рыжик); Alan Jeffrey, Daniel Zwillinger, editors. Table of Integrals, Series, and Products, seventh edition. Academic Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-12-373637-6. Equation 8.411.10
- ^ Arfken & Weber, section 11.2
- ^ Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 363, 9.1.74.
- ^ C. Truesdell, "On the Addition and Multiplication Theorems for the Special Functions", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Mathematics, (1950) pp.752–757.
- ^ F. Bessel, Untersuchung des Theils der planetarischen Störungen, Berlin Abhandlungen (1824), article 14.
- ^ Watson, pp. 484–5
- ^ See, for example, Lide DR. CRC handbook of chemistry and physics: a ready-reference book of chemical CRC Press, 2004, ISBN 0-8493-0485-7, p. A-95
References
- Abramowitz, Milton; Stegun, Irene Ann, eds. (1983) [June 1964]. "Chapter 9". Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables. Applied Mathematics Series. Vol. 55 (Ninth reprint with additional corrections of tenth original printing with corrections (December 1972); first ed.). Washington D.C.; New York: United States Department of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards; Dover Publications. pp. 355, 435. ISBN 978-0-486-61272-0. LCCN 64-60036. MR 0167642. LCCN 65-12253. See also chapter 10.
- Arfken, George B. and Hans J. Weber, Mathematical Methods for Physicists, 6th edition (Harcourt: San Diego, 2005). ISBN 0-12-059876-0.
- Bayin, S.S. Mathematical Methods in Science and Engineering, Wiley, 2006, Chapter 6.
- Bayin, S.S., Essentials of Mathematical Methods in Science and Engineering, Wiley, 2008, Chapter 11.
- Bowman, Frank Introduction to Bessel Functions (Dover: New York, 1958). ISBN 0-486-60462-4.
- G. Mie, "Beiträge zur Optik trüber Medien, speziell kolloidaler Metallösungen", Ann. Phys. Leipzig 25 (1908), p. 377.
- Olver, F. W. J.; Maximon, L. C. (2010), "Bessel function", in Olver, Frank W. J.; Lozier, Daniel M.; Boisvert, Ronald F.; Clark, Charles W. (eds.), NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-19225-5, MR 2723248.
- Press, WH; Teukolsky, SA; Vetterling, WT; Flannery, BP (2007), "Section 6.5. Bessel Functions of Integer Order", Numerical Recipes: The Art of Scientific Computing (3rd ed.), New York: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-88068-8
- B Spain, M.G. Smith, Functions of mathematical physics, Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, London, 1970. Chapter 9 deals with Bessel functions.
- N. M. Temme, Special Functions. An Introduction to the Classical Functions of Mathematical Physics, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 1996. ISBN 0-471-11313-1. Chapter 9 deals with Bessel functions.
- Watson, G.N., A Treatise on the Theory of Bessel Functions, Second Edition, (1995) Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-48391-3.
External links
- Lizorkin, P.I. (2001) [1994], "Bessel functions", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
- Karmazina, L.N.; Prudnikov, A.P. (2001) [1994], "Cylinder function", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
- Rozov, =N.Kh. (2001) [1994], "Bessel equation", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
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: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) - Wolfram function pages on Bessel J and Y functions, and modified Bessel I and K functions. Pages include formulas, function evaluators, and plotting calculators.
- Wolfram Mathworld – Bessel functions of the first kind
- Bessel functions Jν, Yν, Iν and Kν in Librow Function handbook.