I want to try and evaluate this interesting sum: \sum_{n=1}^\infty\frac{1}{\Gamma(n+s)} where 0\leq

William Montgomery

William Montgomery

Answered question

2022-01-23

I want to try and evaluate this interesting sum:
n=11Γ(n+s)
where 0s<q

Answer & Explanation

Kingston Gates

Kingston Gates

Beginner2022-01-24Added 8 answers

We have
n=11Γ(n+s)=1Γ(s+1)(1+1s+1+1(s+1)(s+2)+)
One way to develop such a series is by successively integrating by parts the right hand side of
f(s)=01dζs(1ζ)s1F(ζ)
where F(ζ) is some analytic function of ζ and 01 is shorthand for limϵ0+01ϵ. One finds
f(s)=F(0)+F(0)s+1+F(0)(s+1)(s+2)+
For this problem we have F(n)(0)=1, so F(ζ)=eζ. Then
n=11Γ(n+s)=f(s)Γ(s+1)
=1Γ(s+1)01dζs(1ζ)s1eζ
=eΓ(s)01duus1eu
=eΓ(s)γ(s,1)
where γ(s,x) is the lower incomplete gamma function. Note that γ(s,x)=Γ(s)Γ(s,x), where Γ(s,x) is the upper incomplete gamma function. Therefore,
n=11Γ(n+s)=e(1Γ(s,1)Γ(s)
as claimed.
terorimaox

terorimaox

Beginner2022-01-25Added 16 answers

I guess one starts by considering a more general sum:
Eα,β(z)=n=0znΓ(αn+β)
which is known as a Mittag-Leffler function. For the special case of α=1, the function satisfies a differential equation:
zddzE1,s(z)+(s1)E1,s(z)=n=0n+s1Γ(n+s)=zn=0zn1Γ(n1+s)
=1Γ(s1)+zE1,s
This is an inhomogeneous equation of the first order
zy(z)+(s1z)y(z)=1Γ(s1)
zddz(zs1ezy(z))=1Γ(s1)zs1ez
Hence
y(z)=1zs1ez(C1Γ(s1)zts2etdt)
The integral on the right hand-side is known as incomplete Gamma function.
Incidentally, the original series is also a hypergeometric series, meaning that E1,s(z) represents a hypergeometric function. Indeed:
E1,s(z)=1Γ(s)F1(1;s;z)=1Γ(s)n=0(1)n(s)nzn=n=0znΓ(n+s)
where (s)n=Γ(n+s)Γ(s) was used.
RizerMix

RizerMix

Expert2022-01-27Added 656 answers

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