Appendix/Mathematics/Hypergeometric: Difference between revisions
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Multiplying through by <math>R^2</math>, and making the variable substitutions, | |||
<table border="0" cellpadding="5" align="center"> | |||
<tr> | |||
<td align="right"> | |||
<math>x</math> | |||
</td> | |||
<td align="center"> | |||
<math>\rightarrow</math> | |||
</td> | |||
<td align="left"> | |||
<math>\xi \, ,</math> | |||
</td> | |||
</tr> | |||
<tr> | |||
<td align="right"> | |||
<math>\frac{r_0}{R}</math> | |||
</td> | |||
<td align="center"> | |||
<math>\rightarrow</math> | |||
</td> | |||
<td align="left"> | |||
<math>x \, ,</math> | |||
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<tr> | |||
<td align="right"> | |||
<math>(4 - 3\gamma_g)</math> | |||
</td> | |||
<td align="center"> | |||
<math>\rightarrow</math> | |||
</td> | |||
<td align="left"> | |||
<math>-\alpha \gamma_g \, ,</math> | |||
</td> | |||
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</table> | |||
the LAWE may be rewritten as, | |||
<table border=0 cellpadding=2 align="center"> | |||
<tr> | |||
<td align="right"> | |||
<math>0</math> | |||
</td> | |||
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<math>=</math> | |||
</td> | |||
<td align="left"> | |||
<math> | |||
\frac{d^2\xi}{dx^2} + \biggl[\frac{4}{x} - \biggl(\frac{g_0 \rho_0 R}{P_0}\biggr) \biggr] \frac{d\xi}{dx} | |||
+ \biggl(\frac{\rho_0 R^2}{\gamma_\mathrm{g} P_0} \biggr)\biggl[\omega^2 - \frac{\alpha \gamma_g g_0}{Rx} \biggr]\xi | |||
</math> | |||
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<td align="right"> | |||
| |||
</td> | |||
<td align="center"> | |||
<math>=</math> | |||
</td> | |||
<td align="left"> | |||
<math> | |||
\frac{d^2\xi}{dx^2} + \frac{1}{x}\biggl[4 - \biggl(\frac{g_0 \rho_0 r_0}{P_0}\biggr) \biggr] \frac{d\xi}{dx} | |||
+ \biggl[\biggl(\frac{\omega^2\rho_0 R^2}{\gamma_\mathrm{g} P_0} \biggr) | |||
- \frac{\alpha }{x^2}\biggl(\frac{g_0 \rho_0 r_0}{ P_0} \biggr) \biggr]\xi \, . | |||
</math> | |||
</td> | |||
</tr> | |||
</table> | |||
We obtain equation (1) of | |||
=See Also= | =See Also= | ||
Revision as of 12:38, 26 October 2022
Hypergeometric Differential Equation
According to §9.151 (p. 1045) of Gradshteyn & Ryzhik (1965), "… a hypergeometric series is one of the solutions of the differential equation,
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which is called the hypergeometric equation. And, according to §9.10 (p. 1039) of Gradshteyn & Ryzhik (1965), "A hypergeometric series is a series of the form,
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Among other attributes, Gradshteyn & Ryzhik (1965) note that this, "… series terminates if or is equal to a negative integer or to zero."
LAWE
Drawing from an accompanying discussion, we have the,
where,
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Multiplying through by , and making the variable substitutions,
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the LAWE may be rewritten as,
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We obtain equation (1) of
See Also
- 📚 T. E. Sterne (1937, MNRAS, Vol. 97, pp. 582 - 593): Models of Radial Oscillation
- 📚 C. Prasad (1948, MNRAS, Vol. 108, pp. 414 - 416): Radial Oscillations of a Particular Stellar Model
- Z. Kopal (1948, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 34, pp. 377 - 384, Radial Oscillations of the Limiting Models of Polytropic Gas Spheres.
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In an article titled, "Radial Oscillations of a Stellar Model," C. Prasad (1949, MNRAS, 109, 103) investigated the properties of an equilibrium configuration with a prescribed density distribution given by the expression,
where, is the central density and, is the radius of the star.
- R. Van der Borght (1970, Proceedings of the Astronomical Society of Australia, Vol. 1, Issue 7, pp. 325 - 326), Adiabatic Oscillations of Stars.
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MathProjects/EigenvalueProblemN1: In the most general context, the LAWE takes the form,
Properties of Analytically Defined Astrophysical Structures Model Uniform-density Linear Parabolic Polytrope
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