WSJT-X/boost/libs/math/doc/sf/legendre.qbk

229 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext

[section:legendre Legendre (and Associated) Polynomials]
[h4 Synopsis]
``
#include <boost/math/special_functions/legendre.hpp>
``
namespace boost{ namespace math{
template <class T>
``__sf_result`` legendre_p(int n, T x);
template <class T, class ``__Policy``>
``__sf_result`` legendre_p(int n, T x, const ``__Policy``&);
template <class T>
``__sf_result`` legendre_p(int n, int m, T x);
template <class T, class ``__Policy``>
``__sf_result`` legendre_p(int n, int m, T x, const ``__Policy``&);
template <class T>
``__sf_result`` legendre_q(unsigned n, T x);
template <class T, class ``__Policy``>
``__sf_result`` legendre_q(unsigned n, T x, const ``__Policy``&);
template <class T1, class T2, class T3>
``__sf_result`` legendre_next(unsigned l, T1 x, T2 Pl, T3 Plm1);
template <class T1, class T2, class T3>
``__sf_result`` legendre_next(unsigned l, unsigned m, T1 x, T2 Pl, T3 Plm1);
}} // namespaces
The return type of these functions is computed using the __arg_promotion_rules:
note than when there is a single template argument the result is the same type
as that argument or `double` if the template argument is an integer type.
[optional_policy]
[h4 Description]
template <class T>
``__sf_result`` legendre_p(int l, T x);
template <class T, class ``__Policy``>
``__sf_result`` legendre_p(int l, T x, const ``__Policy``&);
Returns the Legendre Polynomial of the first kind:
[equation legendre_0]
Requires -1 <= x <= 1, otherwise returns the result of __domain_error.
Negative orders are handled via the reflection formula:
P[sub -l-1](x) = P[sub l](x)
The following graph illustrates the behaviour of the first few
Legendre Polynomials:
[graph legendre_p]
template <class T>
``__sf_result`` legendre_p(int l, int m, T x);
template <class T, class ``__Policy``>
``__sf_result`` legendre_p(int l, int m, T x, const ``__Policy``&);
Returns the associated Legendre polynomial of the first kind:
[equation legendre_1]
Requires -1 <= x <= 1, otherwise returns the result of __domain_error.
Negative values of /l/ and /m/ are handled via the identity relations:
[equation legendre_3]
[caution The definition of the associated Legendre polynomial used here
includes a leading Condon-Shortley phase term of (-1)[super m]. This
matches the definition given by Abramowitz and Stegun (8.6.6) and that
used by [@http://mathworld.wolfram.com/LegendrePolynomial.html Mathworld]
and [@http://documents.wolfram.com/mathematica/functions/LegendreP
Mathematica's LegendreP function]. However, uses in the literature
do not always include this phase term, and strangely the specification
for the associated Legendre function in the C++ TR1 (assoc_legendre)
also omits it, in spite of stating that it uses Abramowitz and Stegun
as the final arbiter on these matters.
See:
[@http://mathworld.wolfram.com/LegendrePolynomial.html
Weisstein, Eric W. "Legendre Polynomial."
From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource].
Abramowitz, M. and Stegun, I. A. (Eds.). "Legendre Functions" and
"Orthogonal Polynomials." Ch. 22 in Chs. 8 and 22 in Handbook of
Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables,
9th printing. New York: Dover, pp. 331-339 and 771-802, 1972.
]
template <class T>
``__sf_result`` legendre_q(unsigned n, T x);
template <class T, class ``__Policy``>
``__sf_result`` legendre_q(unsigned n, T x, const ``__Policy``&);
Returns the value of the Legendre polynomial that is the second solution
to the Legendre differential equation, for example:
[equation legendre_2]
Requires -1 <= x <= 1, otherwise __domain_error is called.
The following graph illustrates the first few Legendre functions of the
second kind:
[graph legendre_q]
template <class T1, class T2, class T3>
``__sf_result`` legendre_next(unsigned l, T1 x, T2 Pl, T3 Plm1);
Implements the three term recurrence relation for the Legendre
polynomials, this function can be used to create a sequence of
values evaluated at the same /x/, and for rising /l/. This recurrence
relation holds for Legendre Polynomials of both the first and second kinds.
[equation legendre_4]
For example we could produce a vector of the first 10 polynomial
values using:
double x = 0.5; // Abscissa value
vector<double> v;
v.push_back(legendre_p(0, x));
v.push_back(legendre_p(1, x));
for(unsigned l = 1; l < 10; ++l)
v.push_back(legendre_next(l, x, v[l], v[l-1]));
// Double check values:
for(unsigned l = 1; l < 10; ++l)
assert(v[l] == legendre_p(l, x));
Formally the arguments are:
[variablelist
[[l][The degree of the last polynomial calculated.]]
[[x][The abscissa value]]
[[Pl][The value of the polynomial evaluated at degree /l/.]]
[[Plm1][The value of the polynomial evaluated at degree /l-1/.]]
]
template <class T1, class T2, class T3>
``__sf_result`` legendre_next(unsigned l, unsigned m, T1 x, T2 Pl, T3 Plm1);
Implements the three term recurrence relation for the Associated Legendre
polynomials, this function can be used to create a sequence of
values evaluated at the same /x/, and for rising /l/.
[equation legendre_5]
For example we could produce a vector of the first m+10 polynomial
values using:
double x = 0.5; // Abscissa value
int m = 10; // order
vector<double> v;
v.push_back(legendre_p(m, m, x));
v.push_back(legendre_p(1 + m, m, x));
for(unsigned l = 1; l < 10; ++l)
v.push_back(legendre_next(l + 10, m, x, v[l], v[l-1]));
// Double check values:
for(unsigned l = 1; l < 10; ++l)
assert(v[l] == legendre_p(10 + l, m, x));
Formally the arguments are:
[variablelist
[[l][The degree of the last polynomial calculated.]]
[[m][The order of the Associated Polynomial.]]
[[x][The abscissa value]]
[[Pl][The value of the polynomial evaluated at degree /l/.]]
[[Plm1][The value of the polynomial evaluated at degree /l-1/.]]
]
[h4 Accuracy]
The following table shows peak errors (in units of epsilon)
for various domains of input arguments.
Note that only results for the widest floating point type on the system are
given as narrower types have __zero_error.
[table_legendre_p]
[table_legendre_q]
[table_legendre_p_associated_]
Note that the worst errors occur when the order increases, values greater than
~120 are very unlikely to produce sensible results, especially in the associated
polynomial case when the degree is also large. Further the relative errors
are likely to grow arbitrarily large when the function is very close to a root.
[h4 Testing]
A mixture of spot tests of values calculated using functions.wolfram.com,
and randomly generated test data are
used: the test data was computed using
[@http://shoup.net/ntl/doc/RR.txt NTL::RR] at 1000-bit precision.
[h4 Implementation]
These functions are implemented using the stable three term
recurrence relations. These relations guarantee low absolute error
but cannot guarantee low relative error near one of the roots of the
polynomials.
[endsect][/section:beta_function The Beta Function]
[/
Copyright 2006 John Maddock and Paul A. Bristow.
Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
(See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt).
]