Difference between revisions of "Gamma function written as infinite product"

From specialfunctionswiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 7: Line 7:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* {{BookReference|A course of modern analysis|1920|Edmund Taylor Whittaker|author2=George Neville Watson|prev=Reciprocal gamma written as an infinite product|next=findme}}: $\S 12 \cdot 11$
+
* {{BookReference|A course of modern analysis|1920|Edmund Taylor Whittaker|author2=George Neville Watson|edpage=Third edition|prev=Reciprocal gamma written as an infinite product|next=findme}}: $\S 12 \cdot 11$
 
* {{BookReference|Higher Transcendental Functions Volume I|1953|Harry Bateman|prev=Gamma function written as a limit of a factorial, exponential, and a rising factorial|next=Reciprocal gamma written as an infinite product}}: §1.1 (2)
 
* {{BookReference|Higher Transcendental Functions Volume I|1953|Harry Bateman|prev=Gamma function written as a limit of a factorial, exponential, and a rising factorial|next=Reciprocal gamma written as an infinite product}}: §1.1 (2)
  
 
[[Category:Theorem]]
 
[[Category:Theorem]]
 
[[Category:Unproven]]
 
[[Category:Unproven]]

Revision as of 03:07, 12 June 2016

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\Gamma(z) = \dfrac{1}{z} \displaystyle\prod_{k=1}^{\infty} \dfrac{(1+\frac{1}{k})^z}{1+\frac{z}{n}},$$ where $\Gamma$ denotes the gamma function.

Proof

References