Schlömilch's series is a Fourier series type expansion of twice continuously differentiable function in the interval in terms of the Bessel function of the first kind, named after the German mathematician Oskar Schlömilch, who derived the series in 1857.[1][2][3][4][5] The real-valued function has the following expansion:

where

Examples

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Some examples of Schlömilch's series are the following:

  • Null functions in the interval   can be expressed by Schlömilch's Series,  , which cannot be obtained by Fourier Series. This is particularly interesting because the null function is represented by a series expansion in which not all the coefficients are zero. The series converges only when  ; the series oscillates at   and diverges at  . This theorem is generalized so that   when   and   and also when   and  . These properties were identified by Niels Nielsen.[6]
  •  
  •  
  •  
  • If   are the cylindrical polar coordinates, then the series   is a solution of Laplace equation for  .

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Schlomilch, G. (1857). On Bessel's function. Zeitschrift fur Math, and Phys., 2, 155-158.
  2. ^ Whittaker, E. T., & Watson, G. N. (1996). A Course of Modern Analysis. Cambridge university press.
  3. ^ Lord Rayleigh (1911). LXII. On a physical interpretation of Schlömilch's theorem in Bessel's functions. The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, 21(124), 567-571.
  4. ^ Watson, G. N. (1995). A treatise on the theory of Bessel functions. Cambridge university press.
  5. ^ Chapman, S. (1911). On the general theory of summability, with application to Fourier's and other series. Quarterly Journal, 43, 1-52.
  6. ^ Nielsen, N. (1904). Handbuch der theorie der cylinderfunktionen. BG Teubner.