I am evaluating the partition function of a system of particles and incurred in sums like S(a)=sum_(k=0)^infty (2k+1)^(kappa/2)e^(-(2k+1)a)

pominjaneh6

pominjaneh6

Answered question

2022-08-09

I am evaluating the partition function of a system of particles and incurred in sums like
S ( a ) = k = 0 ( 2 k + 1 ) κ 2 e ( 2 k + 1 ) a

Answer & Explanation

gorilomgl

gorilomgl

Beginner2022-08-10Added 9 answers

I put a similar sum in Wolfram Alpha (Mathematica) and found:
k = 0 m ( 2 k + 1 ) κ / 2 e ( 2 k + 1 ) a = 2 κ / 2 e 3 a ( e 2 a Φ ( e 2 a , κ / 2 , 1 / 2 ) e 2 a m Φ ( e 2 a , κ / 2 , m + 3 / 2 ) ) ,
where Φ is the Lerch transcendent. The sum is said to converge for e R e ( a )
Taking the limit as m
k = 0 ( 2 k + 1 ) κ / 2 e ( 2 k + 1 ) a = 2 κ / 2 e a Φ ( e 2 a , κ / 2 , 1 / 2 )
This seems to be reasonable in the large a limit since
Φ ( e 2 a , κ / 2 , 1 / 2 ) = = 0 e 2 a ( 1 / 2 + ) κ / 2
and the overall result in that large a limit is just:
e a
as might be expected by looking at the k=0 term in the sum.

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