Carlson symmetric form

Summary

In mathematics, the Carlson symmetric forms of elliptic integrals are a small canonical set of elliptic integrals to which all others may be reduced. They are a modern alternative to the Legendre forms. The Legendre forms may be expressed in terms of the Carlson forms and vice versa.

The Carlson elliptic integrals are:[1]

Since and are special cases of and , all elliptic integrals can ultimately be evaluated in terms of just , , and .

The term symmetric refers to the fact that in contrast to the Legendre forms, these functions are unchanged by the exchange of certain subsets of their arguments. The value of is the same for any permutation of its arguments, and the value of is the same for any permutation of its first three arguments.

The Carlson elliptic integrals are named after Bille C. Carlson (1924-2013).

Relation to the Legendre forms edit

Incomplete elliptic integrals edit

Incomplete elliptic integrals can be calculated easily using Carlson symmetric forms:

 
 
 

(Note: the above are only valid for   and  )

Complete elliptic integrals edit

Complete elliptic integrals can be calculated by substituting φ = 12π:

 
 
 

Special cases edit

When any two, or all three of the arguments of   are the same, then a substitution of   renders the integrand rational. The integral can then be expressed in terms of elementary transcendental functions.

 

Similarly, when at least two of the first three arguments of   are the same,

 

Properties edit

Homogeneity edit

By substituting in the integral definitions   for any constant  , it is found that

 
 

Duplication theorem edit

 

where  .

 [2]

where   and  

Series Expansion edit

In obtaining a Taylor series expansion for   or   it proves convenient to expand about the mean value of the several arguments. So for  , letting the mean value of the arguments be  , and using homogeneity, define  ,   and   by

 

that is   etc. The differences  ,   and   are defined with this sign (such that they are subtracted), in order to be in agreement with Carlson's papers. Since   is symmetric under permutation of  ,   and  , it is also symmetric in the quantities  ,   and  . It follows that both the integrand of   and its integral can be expressed as functions of the elementary symmetric polynomials in  ,   and   which are

 
 
 

Expressing the integrand in terms of these polynomials, performing a multidimensional Taylor expansion and integrating term-by-term...

 

The advantage of expanding about the mean value of the arguments is now apparent; it reduces   identically to zero, and so eliminates all terms involving   - which otherwise would be the most numerous.

An ascending series for   may be found in a similar way. There is a slight difficulty because   is not fully symmetric; its dependence on its fourth argument,  , is different from its dependence on  ,   and  . This is overcome by treating   as a fully symmetric function of five arguments, two of which happen to have the same value  . The mean value of the arguments is therefore taken to be

 

and the differences  ,     and   defined by

 

The elementary symmetric polynomials in  ,  ,  ,   and (again)   are in full

 
 
 
 
 

However, it is possible to simplify the formulae for  ,   and   using the fact that  . Expressing the integrand in terms of these polynomials, performing a multidimensional Taylor expansion and integrating term-by-term as before...

 

As with  , by expanding about the mean value of the arguments, more than half the terms (those involving  ) are eliminated.

Negative arguments edit

In general, the arguments x, y, z of Carlson's integrals may not be real and negative, as this would place a branch point on the path of integration, making the integral ambiguous. However, if the second argument of  , or the fourth argument, p, of   is negative, then this results in a simple pole on the path of integration. In these cases the Cauchy principal value (finite part) of the integrals may be of interest; these are

 

and

 

where

 

which must be greater than zero for   to be evaluated. This may be arranged by permuting x, y and z so that the value of y is between that of x and z.

Numerical evaluation edit

The duplication theorem can be used for a fast and robust evaluation of the Carlson symmetric form of elliptic integrals and therefore also for the evaluation of Legendre-form of elliptic integrals. Let us calculate  : first, define  ,   and  . Then iterate the series

 
 

until the desired precision is reached: if  ,   and   are non-negative, all of the series will converge quickly to a given value, say,  . Therefore,

 

Evaluating   is much the same due to the relation

 

References and External links edit

  1. ^ F.W.J. Olver, D.W. Lozier, R.F. Boisvert, and C.W. Clark, editors, 2010, NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions (Cambridge University Press), Section 19.16, "Symmetic Integrals". Retrieved 2024-04-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link).
  2. ^ Carlson, Bille C. (1994). "Numerical computation of real or complex elliptic integrals". arXiv:math/9409227v1.
  • B. C. Carlson, John L. Gustafson 'Asymptotic approximations for symmetric elliptic integrals' 1993 arXiv
  • B. C. Carlson 'Numerical Computation of Real Or Complex Elliptic Integrals' 1994 arXiv
  • B. C. Carlson 'Elliptic Integrals:Symmetric Integrals' in Chap. 19 of Digital Library of Mathematical Functions. Release date 2010-05-07. National Institute of Standards and Technology.
  • 'Profile: Bille C. Carlson' in Digital Library of Mathematical Functions. National Institute of Standards and Technology.
  • Press, WH; Teukolsky, SA; Vetterling, WT; Flannery, BP (2007), "Section 6.12. Elliptic Integrals and Jacobian Elliptic Functions", Numerical Recipes: The Art of Scientific Computing (3rd ed.), New York: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-88068-8, archived from the original on 2011-08-11, retrieved 2011-08-10
  • Fortran code from SLATEC for evaluating RF, RJ, RC, RD,