Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Lima, F. M. S.
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2022
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.10942
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
_version_ 1866909522881150976
author Lima, F. M. S.
author_facet Lima, F. M. S.
contents It is well-known that separation of variables in 2nd order partial differential equations (PDEs) for physical problems with spherical symmetry usually leads to Cauchy's differential equation for the radial coordinate and Legendre's differential equation for the polar angle $θ$. For eigenvalues of the form $\,n\,(n+1)$, $n \ge 0\,$ being an integer, Legendre's equation admits certain polynomials $P_n(\cosθ)$ as solutions, which form a complete set of continuous orthogonal functions for all $θ\in [0,π]$. This allows us to take the polynomials $P_n(x)$, where $x = \cosθ$, as a basis for the Fourier-Legendre series expansion of any function $f(x)$ continuous by parts over $\,x \in [-1,1]$. These lecture notes correspond to the end of my course on Mathematical Methods for Physics, when I did derive the differential equations and solutions for physical problems with spherical symmetry. For those interested in Number Theory, I have included an application of shifted Legendre polynomials in \emph{irrationality proofs}, following a method introduced by Beukers to show that $ζ{(2)}$ and $ζ{(3)}$ are irrational numbers.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2210_10942
institution arXiv
publishDate 2022
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Lecture notes on Legendre polynomials: their origin and main properties
Lima, F. M. S.
Mathematical Physics
Number Theory
42C10
It is well-known that separation of variables in 2nd order partial differential equations (PDEs) for physical problems with spherical symmetry usually leads to Cauchy's differential equation for the radial coordinate and Legendre's differential equation for the polar angle $θ$. For eigenvalues of the form $\,n\,(n+1)$, $n \ge 0\,$ being an integer, Legendre's equation admits certain polynomials $P_n(\cosθ)$ as solutions, which form a complete set of continuous orthogonal functions for all $θ\in [0,π]$. This allows us to take the polynomials $P_n(x)$, where $x = \cosθ$, as a basis for the Fourier-Legendre series expansion of any function $f(x)$ continuous by parts over $\,x \in [-1,1]$. These lecture notes correspond to the end of my course on Mathematical Methods for Physics, when I did derive the differential equations and solutions for physical problems with spherical symmetry. For those interested in Number Theory, I have included an application of shifted Legendre polynomials in \emph{irrationality proofs}, following a method introduced by Beukers to show that $ζ{(2)}$ and $ζ{(3)}$ are irrational numbers.
title Lecture notes on Legendre polynomials: their origin and main properties
topic Mathematical Physics
Number Theory
42C10
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.10942