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1: Bibliography N
  • D. Naylor (1989) On an integral transform involving a class of Mathieu functions. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 20 (6), pp. 1500–1513.
  • 2: 28 Mathieu Functions and Hill’s Equation
    Chapter 28 Mathieu Functions and Hill’s Equation
    3: Bibliography S
  • A. Sharples (1967) Uniform asymptotic forms of modified Mathieu functions. Quart. J. Mech. Appl. Math. 20 (3), pp. 365–380.
  • 4: 28.35 Tables
  • Kirkpatrick (1960) contains tables of the modified functions Ce n ( x , q ) , Se n + 1 ( x , q ) for n = 0 ( 1 ) 5 , q = 1 ( 1 ) 20 , x = 0.1 ( .1 ) 1 ; 4D or 5D.

  • National Bureau of Standards (1967) includes the eigenvalues a n ( q ) , b n ( q ) for n = 0 ( 1 ) 3 with q = 0 ( .2 ) 20 ( .5 ) 37 ( 1 ) 100 , and n = 4 ( 1 ) 15 with q = 0 ( 2 ) 100 ; Fourier coefficients for ce n ( x , q ) and se n ( x , q ) for n = 0 ( 1 ) 15 , n = 1 ( 1 ) 15 , respectively, and various values of q in the interval [ 0 , 100 ] ; joining factors g e , n ( q ) , f e , n ( q ) for n = 0 ( 1 ) 15 with q = 0 ( .5  to  10 ) 100 (but in a different notation). Also, eigenvalues for large values of q . Precision is generally 8D.

  • Zhang and Jin (1996, pp. 521–532) includes the eigenvalues a n ( q ) , b n + 1 ( q ) for n = 0 ( 1 ) 4 , q = 0 ( 1 ) 50 ; n = 0 ( 1 ) 20 ( a ’s) or 19 ( b ’s), q = 1 , 3 , 5 , 10 , 15 , 25 , 50 ( 50 ) 200 . Fourier coefficients for ce n ( x , 10 ) , se n + 1 ( x , 10 ) , n = 0 ( 1 ) 7 . Mathieu functions ce n ( x , 10 ) , se n + 1 ( x , 10 ) , and their first x -derivatives for n = 0 ( 1 ) 4 , x = 0 ( 5 ) 90 . Modified Mathieu functions Mc n ( j ) ( x , 10 ) , Ms n + 1 ( j ) ( x , 10 ) , and their first x -derivatives for n = 0 ( 1 ) 4 , j = 1 , 2 , x = 0 ( .2 ) 4 . Precision is mostly 9S.

  • 5: Bibliography V
  • A. L. Van Buren and J. E. Boisvert (2007) Accurate calculation of the modified Mathieu functions of integer order. Quart. Appl. Math. 65 (1), pp. 1–23.
  • Van Buren (website) Mathieu and Spheroidal Wave Functions: Fortran Programs for their Accurate Calculation
  • G. Vedeler (1950) A Mathieu equation for ships rolling among waves. I, II. Norske Vid. Selsk. Forh., Trondheim 22 (25–26), pp. 113–123.
  • H. Volkmer (1998) On the growth of convergence radii for the eigenvalues of the Mathieu equation. Math. Nachr. 192, pp. 239–253.
  • H. Volkmer (2004a) Error estimates for Rayleigh-Ritz approximations of eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of the Mathieu and spheroidal wave equation. Constr. Approx. 20 (1), pp. 39–54.
  • 6: Bibliography L
  • R. E. Langer (1934) The solutions of the Mathieu equation with a complex variable and at least one parameter large. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 36 (3), pp. 637–695.
  • T. M. Larsen, D. Erricolo, and P. L. E. Uslenghi (2009) New method to obtain small parameter power series expansions of Mathieu radial and angular functions. Math. Comp. 78 (265), pp. 255–274.
  • P. W. Lawrence, R. M. Corless, and D. J. Jeffrey (2012) Algorithm 917: complex double-precision evaluation of the Wright ω function. ACM Trans. Math. Software 38 (3), pp. Art. 20, 17.
  • W. R. Leeb (1979) Algorithm 537: Characteristic values of Mathieu’s differential equation. ACM Trans. Math. Software 5 (1), pp. 112–117.
  • D. J. Leeming (1977) An asymptotic estimate for the Bernoulli and Euler numbers. Canad. Math. Bull. 20 (1), pp. 109–111.
  • 7: Bibliography K
  • R. B. Kearfott, M. Dawande, K. Du, and C. Hu (1994) Algorithm 737: INTLIB: A portable Fortran 77 interval standard-function library. ACM Trans. Math. Software 20 (4), pp. 447–459.
  • M. K. Kerimov (1980) Methods of computing the Riemann zeta-function and some generalizations of it. USSR Comput. Math. and Math. Phys. 20 (6), pp. 212–230.
  • E. T. Kirkpatrick (1960) Tables of values of the modified Mathieu functions. Math. Comp. 14, pp. 118–129.
  • A. V. Kitaev and A. H. Vartanian (2004) Connection formulae for asymptotics of solutions of the degenerate third Painlevé equation. I. Inverse Problems 20 (4), pp. 1165–1206.
  • T. H. Koornwinder (2009) The Askey scheme as a four-manifold with corners. Ramanujan J. 20 (3), pp. 409–439.
  • 8: Software Index
    Open Source With Book Commercial
    20 Theta Functions
    ‘✓’ indicates that a software package implements the functions in a section; ‘a’ indicates available functionality through optional or add-on packages; an empty space indicates no known support. … In the list below we identify four main sources of software for computing special functions. …
  • Commercial Software.

    Such software ranges from a collection of reusable software parts (e.g., a library) to fully functional interactive computing environments with an associated computing language. Such software is usually professionally developed, tested, and maintained to high standards. It is available for purchase, often with accompanying updates and consulting support.

  • The following are web-based software repositories with significant holdings in the area of special functions. …
    9: 28.1 Special Notation
    The main functions treated in this chapter are the Mathieu functions …and the modified Mathieu functions …The functions Mc n ( j ) ( z , h ) and Ms n ( j ) ( z , h ) are also known as the radial Mathieu functions. …
    Abramowitz and Stegun (1964, Chapter 20)
    The radial functions Mc n ( j ) ( z , h ) and Ms n ( j ) ( z , h ) are denoted by Mc n ( j ) ( z , q ) and Ms n ( j ) ( z , q ) , respectively.
    10: 28.8 Asymptotic Expansions for Large q
    §28.8(ii) Sips’ Expansions
    §28.8(iii) Goldstein’s Expansions
    Barrett’s Expansions
    Dunster’s Approximations