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Legendre Polynomials PDF

The document discusses Legendre polynomials Pn(x), which are solutions to Legendre's differential equation. Legendre polynomials are used to approximate functions within the interval [-1,1]. The key properties are: 1) Pn(x) is an nth degree polynomial. 2) Pn(x) satisfies a recurrence relation that allows generating higher order polynomials from lower ones. 3) Pn(x) has specific values at x = 1, -1, and 0 depending on whether n is even or odd.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
110 views19 pages

Legendre Polynomials PDF

The document discusses Legendre polynomials Pn(x), which are solutions to Legendre's differential equation. Legendre polynomials are used to approximate functions within the interval [-1,1]. The key properties are: 1) Pn(x) is an nth degree polynomial. 2) Pn(x) satisfies a recurrence relation that allows generating higher order polynomials from lower ones. 3) Pn(x) has specific values at x = 1, -1, and 0 depending on whether n is even or odd.

Uploaded by

Bappy K M B
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Legendre Polynomials Pn(x)

K M BILLAH, LECTURER,
DEPT. OF CIVIL ENGINEERING, UU
Special Functions

Bessel’s Equation of order v

(1)
x 2 y  xy  ( x 2  v 2 ) y  0
where v  0, and x = 0 is a regular singular point of (1). The
solutions of (1) are called Bessel functions.
Legendre's Equation of order n
(1  x 2 ) y  2 xy  n(n  1) y  0
(2)
where n is a nonnegative integer, and x = 0 is an ordinary
point of (2). The solutions of (2) are called Legendre
functions.
The Solution of Legendre Equation

Since x = 0 is an ordinary point of (2), we use


y   c
n0 n x n

After substitutions and simplifications, we obtain


n( n  1)c0  2c2  0
( n  1)(n  2)c1  6c3  0
( j  2)( j  1)c j  2  ( n  j )(n  j  1)c j  0
or in the following forms:
n(n  1)
c2   c0
2!
(n  1)(n  2)
c3   c1
3!
(n  j )(n  j  1)
c j 2   c j , j  2, 3, 4,  (25)
( j  2)( j  1)
Using (25), at least |x| < 1, we obtain
 n(n  1) 2 (n  2)n(n  1)(n  3) 4
y1 ( x)  c0 1  x  x
 2! 4!
(n  4)(n  2)n(n  1)(n  3)(n  5) 6
 x  
6! 
 (n  1)(n  2) 3 (n  3)(n  1)(n  2)(n  4) 5
y2 ( x)  c1  x  x  x
 3 ! 5!
(n  5)(n  3)(n  1)(n  2)(n  4)(n  6) 7
 x   (26)
7! 

Notice: If n is an even integer, the first series


terminates, whereas y2 is an infinite series.
If n is an odd integer, the series y2 terminates with xn.
Legendre Polynomials

The following are nth order Legendre polynomials:

P0 ( x)  1, P1 ( x)  x
1 1
P2 ( x)  (3 x 2  1), P3 ( x)  (5 x 3 )  3 x
2 2
1 1
P4 ( x)  (35x   30 x 2  3), P5 ( x)  (63x5  70 x3  15 x)
8 8
They are in turn the solutions of the DEs. See Fig 5.5

n  0 : (1  x 2 ) y  2 xy  0
n  1 : (1  x 2 ) y  2 xy  2 y  0
n  2 : (1  x 2 ) y  2 xy  6 y  0
(28)
n  3 : (1  x 2 ) y  2 xy  12 y  0
 
Properties

(1) Pn ( x)  (1)n Pn ( x)

(2) Pn (1)  1

(3) Pn (1)  (1)n

(4) Pn (0)  0, n odd

(5) P 'n (0)  0, n even


Recurrence Relation

Without proof, we have


(k  1) Pk 1 ( x)  (2k  1) xPk ( x)  kPk 1 ( x(29)
)0
which is valid for k = 1, 2, 3, …
Another formula by differentiation to generate Legender polynomials is
called the Rodrigues’ formula:

n (30)
1 d 2 n
Pn ( x)  n n
( x  1) , n  0, 1, 2, ...
2 n! dx
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