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DLMF: §24.16 Generalizations ‣ Properties ‣ Chapter 24 Bernoulli and Euler Polynomials
§24.16 Generalizations
Contents
§24.16(i) Higher-Order Analogs
§24.16(ii) Character Analogs
§24.16(iii) Other Generalizations
§24.16(i) Higher-Order Analogs
Polynomials and Numbers of Integer Order
For ℓ = 0 , 1 , 2 , … , Bernoulli and Euler polynomials of order
ℓ are defined respectively by
24.16.1
( t e t − 1 ) ℓ e x t
= ∑ n = 0 ∞ B n ( ℓ ) ( x ) t n n ! ,
| t | < 2 π ,
24.16.2
( 2 e t + 1 ) ℓ e x t
= ∑ n = 0 ∞ E n ( ℓ ) ( x ) t n n ! ,
| t | < π .
When x = 0 they reduce to the Bernoulli and Euler numbers of
order ℓ :
24.16.3
B n ( ℓ )
= B n ( ℓ ) ( 0 ) ,
E n ( ℓ )
= E n ( ℓ ) ( 0 ) .
Also for ℓ = 1 , 2 , 3 , … ,
24.16.4
( ln ( 1 + t ) t ) ℓ = ℓ ∑ n = 0 ∞ B n ( ℓ + n ) ℓ + n t n n ! ,
| t | < 1 .
For this and other properties see Milne-Thomson (1933 , pp. 126–153)
or Nörlund (1924 , pp. 144–162) .
For extensions of B n ( ℓ ) ( x ) to complex values of x , n , and
ℓ , and also for uniform asymptotic expansions for large x and large n ,
see Temme (1995b ) and López and Temme (1999b , 2010b ) .
Bernoulli Numbers of the Second Kind
24.16.5
t ln ( 1 + t ) = ∑ n = 0 ∞ b n t n ,
| t | < 1 ,
24.16.6
n ! b n = − 1 n − 1 B n ( n − 1 ) ,
n = 2 , 3 , … .
Degenerate Bernoulli Numbers
For sufficiently small | t | ,
24.16.7
t ( 1 + λ t ) 1 / λ − 1 = ∑ n = 0 ∞ β n ( λ ) t n n ! ,
24.16.8
β n ( λ ) = n ! b n λ n + ∑ k = 1 ⌊ n / 2 ⌋ n 2 k B 2 k s ( n − 1 , 2 k − 1 ) λ n − 2 k ,
n = 2 , 3 , … .
Here s ( n , m ) again denotes the Stirling number of the first kind.
Nörlund Polynomials
24.16.9
( t e t − 1 ) x = ∑ n = 0 ∞ B n ( x ) t n n ! ,
| t | < 2 π .
B n ( x ) is a polynomial in x of degree n . (This notation is
consistent with (24.16.3 ) when x = ℓ .)
§24.16(ii) Character Analogs
Let χ be a primitive Dirichlet character mod f (see §27.8 ).
Then f is called the conductor of χ . Generalized Bernoulli
numbers and polynomials belonging to χ are defined by
24.16.10
∑ a = 1 f χ ( a ) t e a t e f t − 1 = ∑ n = 0 ∞ B n , χ t n n ! ,
24.16.11
B n , χ ( x ) = ∑ k = 0 n ( n k ) B k , χ x n − k .
Let χ 0 be the trivial character and χ 4 the unique (nontrivial)
character with f = 4 ; that is, χ 4 ( 1 ) = 1 , χ 4 ( 3 ) = − 1 ,
χ 4 ( 2 ) = χ 4 ( 4 ) = 0 . Then
24.16.12
B n ( x ) = B n , χ 0 ( x − 1 ) ,
24.16.13
E n ( x ) = − 2 1 − n n + 1 B n + 1 , χ 4 ( 2 x − 1 ) .
For further properties see Berndt (1975a ) .
§24.16(iii) Other Generalizations
In no particular order, other generalizations include: Bernoulli numbers and
polynomials with arbitrary complex index (Butzer et al. (1992 ) ); Euler
numbers and polynomials with arbitrary complex index (Butzer et al. (1994 ) );
q-analogs (Carlitz (1954a ) , Andrews and Foata (1980 ) ); conjugate
Bernoulli and Euler polynomials (Hauss (1997 , 1998 ) );
Bernoulli–Hurwitz numbers (Katz (1975 ) ); poly-Bernoulli numbers
(Kaneko (1997 ) ); Universal Bernoulli numbers
(Clarke (1989 ) ); p -adic integer order Bernoulli numbers
(Adelberg (1996 ) ); p -adic q -Bernoulli numbers
(Kim and Kim (1999 ) ); periodic Bernoulli numbers (Berndt (1975b ) );
cotangent numbers (Girstmair (1990b ) ); Bernoulli–Carlitz numbers
(Goss (1978 ) ); Bernoulli–Padé numbers (Dilcher (2002 ) );
Bernoulli numbers belonging to periodic functions
(Urbanowicz (1988 ) ); cyclotomic Bernoulli numbers
(Girstmair (1990a ) ); modified Bernoulli numbers
(Zagier (1998 ) ); higher-order Bernoulli and Euler polynomials with
multiple parameters (Erdélyi et al. (1953a , §§1.13.1, 1.14.1) ).