Difference between revisions of "Pochhammer"

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=References=
 
=References=
 
* {{BookReference|Special Functions|1960|Earl David Rainville|prev=findme|next=findme}}: $18. (1)$ (note: Rainville calls this the "factorial function" and expresses it slightly differently by defining it by the equivalent formula $(\alpha)_n=\displaystyle\prod_{k=1}^n (\alpha+k-1)$)
 
* {{BookReference|Special Functions|1960|Earl David Rainville|prev=findme|next=findme}}: $18. (1)$ (note: Rainville calls this the "factorial function" and expresses it slightly differently by defining it by the equivalent formula $(\alpha)_n=\displaystyle\prod_{k=1}^n (\alpha+k-1)$)
[http://dualaud.net/specialfunctionswiki/abramowitz_and_stegun-1.03/page_256.htm Abramowitz and Stegun]
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* {{BookReference|Generalized Hypergeometric Series|1964|W.N. Bailey|next=Hypergeometric 2F1}}: Section $1.1$
 
 
 
[[Category:SpecialFunction]]
 
[[Category:SpecialFunction]]

Revision as of 02:33, 15 February 2017

The Pochhammer symbol $(a)_n$ is a notation that denotes the "rising factorial" function. It is defined by $$\left\{ \begin{array}{ll} (a)_0 &= 1 \\ (a)_n \equiv a^{\overline{n}} &= \displaystyle\prod_{k=0}^{n-1} a+k=a(a+1)(a+2)\ldots(a+n-1). \end{array} \right.$$

Properties

Sum of reciprocal Pochhammer symbols of a fixed exponent

Notes

We are using this symbol to denote the rising factorial (following the notation used by Abramowitz&Stegun and Mathematica) as opposed to denoting the falling factorial (as Wikipedia does).

References