imported>Paul Wormer |
imported>Paul Wormer |
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| -m(m+1) \right] \Pi^{(m)}_\ell(x) = 0 . | | -m(m+1) \right] \Pi^{(m)}_\ell(x) = 0 . |
| </math> | | </math> |
| SAfter substitutition of
| | After substitution of |
| :<math> | | :<math> |
| \Pi^{(m)}_\ell(x) = (1-x^2)^{-m/2} P^{(m)}_\ell(x), | | \Pi^{(m)}_\ell(x) = (1-x^2)^{-m/2} P^{(m)}_\ell(x), |
Revision as of 06:59, 22 August 2007
In mathematics and physics, an associated Legendre function Pl(m) is related to a Legendre polynomial Pl by the following equation

For even m the associated Legendre function is a polynomial, for odd m the function contains the factor (1-x ² )½ and hence is not a polynomial.
The associated Legendre polynomials are important in quantum mechanics and potential theory.
Differential equation
Define

where Pl(x) is a Legendre polynomial.
Differentiating the Legendre differential equation:

m times gives an equation for Π(m)l
![{\displaystyle (1-x^{2}){\frac {d^{2}\Pi _{\ell }^{(m)}(x)}{dx^{2}}}-2(m+1)x{\frac {d\Pi _{\ell }^{(m)}(x)}{dx}}+\left[\ell (\ell +1)-m(m+1)\right]\Pi _{\ell }^{(m)}(x)=0.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/f55acd236ce3001a02eb1f8137d2cadc3da528d7)
After substitution of

we find, after multiplying through with
, that the associated Legendre differential equation holds for the associated Legendre functions
![{\displaystyle (1-x^{2}){\frac {d^{2}P_{\ell }^{(m)}(x)}{dx^{2}}}-2x{\frac {dP_{\ell }^{(m)}(x)}{dx}}+\left[\ell (\ell +1)-{\frac {m^{2}}{1-x^{2}}}\right]P_{\ell }^{(m)}(x).}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/df1caa81681ff0254662e2b4ba39f87b838c1965)
In physical applications usually x = cosθ, then then associated Legendre differential equation takes the form
![{\displaystyle {\frac {1}{\sin \theta }}{\frac {d}{d\theta }}\sin \theta {\frac {d}{d\theta }}P_{\ell }^{(m)}+\left[\ell (\ell +1)-{\frac {m^{2}}{\sin ^{2}\theta }}\right]P_{\ell }^{(m)}.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/6f60c562807c12f8b7169bbf14d828dd84cb252e)