Wet-bulb temperature

From formulasearchengine
Revision as of 05:35, 12 November 2013 by en>烈之斩 (External links)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Lowercase In mathematics, in the area of combinatorics, the q-derivative, or Jackson derivative, is a q-analog of the ordinary derivative, introduced by Frank Hilton Jackson. It is the inverse of Jackson's q-integration

Definition

The q-derivative of a function f(x) is defined as

(ddx)qf(x)=f(qx)f(x)qxx.

It is also often written as Dqf(x). The q-derivative is also known as the Jackson derivative.

Formally, in terms of Lagrange's shift operator in logarithmic variables, it amounts to the operator

Dq=1xqdd(lnx)1q1,

which goes to the plain derivative, →ddx, as q→1.

It is manifestly linear,

Dq(f(x)+g(x))=Dqf(x)+Dqg(x).

It has product rule analogous to the ordinary derivative product rule, with two equivalent forms

Dq(f(x)g(x))=g(x)Dqf(x)+f(qx)Dqg(x)=g(qx)Dqf(x)+f(x)Dqg(x).

Similarly, it satisfies a quotient rule,

Dq(f(x)/g(x))=g(x)Dqf(x)f(x)Dqg(x)g(qx)g(x),g(x)g(qx)0.

There is also a rule similar to the chain rule for ordinary derivatives. Let g(x)=cxk. Then

Dqf(g(x))=Dqk(f)(g(x))Dq(g)(x).

The eigenfunction of the q-derivative is the q-exponential eq(x).

Relationship to ordinary derivatives

Q-differentiation resembles ordinary differentiation, with curious differences. For example, the q-derivative of the monomial is:

(ddz)qzn=1qn1qzn1=[n]qzn1

where [n]q is the q-bracket of n. Note that limq1[n]q=n so the ordinary derivative is regained in this limit.

The n-th q-derivative of a function may be given as:

(Dqnf)(0)=f(n)(0)n!(q;q)n(1q)n=f(n)(0)n![n]q!

provided that the ordinary n-th derivative of f exists at x=0. Here, (q;q)n is the q-Pochhammer symbol, and [n]q! is the q-factorial. If f(x) is analytic we can apply the Taylor formula to the definition of Dq(f(x)) to get

Dq(f(x))=k=0(q1)k(k+1)!xkf(k+1)(x).

A q-analog of the Taylor expansion of a function about zero follows:

f(z)=n=0f(n)(0)znn!=n=0(Dqnf)(0)zn[n]q!

See also

References

  • F. H. Jackson (1908), "On q-functions and a certain difference operator", Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., 46 253-281.
  • Exton, H. (1983), q-Hypergeometric Functions and Applications, New York: Halstead Press, Chichester: Ellis Horwood, 1983, ISBN 0853124914, ISBN 0470274530, ISBN 978-0470274538
  • Victor Kac, Pokman Cheung, Quantum Calculus, Universitext, Springer-Verlag, 2002. ISBN 0-387-95341-8

Further reading