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11: 6.17 Physical Applications
Geller and Ng (1969) cites work with applications from diffusion theory, transport problems, the study of the radiative equilibrium of stellar atmospheres, and the evaluation of exchange integrals occurring in quantum mechanics. …
12: Bibliography K
  • P. L. Kapitsa (1951a) Heat conduction and diffusion in a fluid medium with a periodic flow. I. Determination of the wave transfer coefficient in a tube, slot, and canal. Akad. Nauk SSSR. Žurnal Eksper. Teoret. Fiz. 21, pp. 964–978.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • V. Kourganoff (1952) Basic Methods in Transfer Problems. Radiative Equilibrium and Neutron Diffusion. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
  • 13: 28 Mathieu Functions and Hill’s Equation
    Chapter 28 Mathieu Functions and Hill’s Equation
    14: 20 Theta Functions
    Chapter 20 Theta Functions
    15: 28.16 Asymptotic Expansions for Large q
    §28.16 Asymptotic Expansions for Large q
    28.16.1 λ ν ( h 2 ) 2 h 2 + 2 s h 1 8 ( s 2 + 1 ) 1 2 7 h ( s 3 + 3 s ) 1 2 12 h 2 ( 5 s 4 + 34 s 2 + 9 ) 1 2 17 h 3 ( 33 s 5 + 410 s 3 + 405 s ) 1 2 20 h 4 ( 63 s 6 + 1260 s 4 + 2943 s 2 + 486 ) 1 2 25 h 5 ( 527 s 7 + 15617 s 5 + 69001 s 3 + 41607 s ) + .
    16: Bibliography O
  • K. Okamoto (1987a) Studies on the Painlevé equations. I. Sixth Painlevé equation P VI . Ann. Mat. Pura Appl. (4) 146, pp. 337–381.
  • K. Okamoto (1987b) Studies on the Painlevé equations. II. Fifth Painlevé equation P V . Japan. J. Math. (N.S.) 13 (1), pp. 47–76.
  • K. Okamoto (1987c) Studies on the Painlevé equations. IV. Third Painlevé equation P III . Funkcial. Ekvac. 30 (2-3), pp. 305–332.
  • A. B. Olde Daalhuis (2005b) Hyperasymptotics for nonlinear ODEs. II. The first Painlevé equation and a second-order Riccati equation. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. Ser. A Math. Phys. Eng. Sci. 461 (2062), pp. 3005–3021.
  • J. Oliver (1977) An error analysis of the modified Clenshaw method for evaluating Chebyshev and Fourier series. J. Inst. Math. Appl. 20 (3), pp. 379–391.
  • 17: Bibliography N
  • A. Nakamura (1996) Toda equation and its solutions in special functions. J. Phys. Soc. Japan 65 (6), pp. 1589–1597.
  • D. Naylor (1989) On an integral transform involving a class of Mathieu functions. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 20 (6), pp. 1500–1513.
  • W. J. Nellis and B. C. Carlson (1966) Reduction and evaluation of elliptic integrals. Math. Comp. 20 (94), pp. 223–231.
  • M. Newman (1967) Solving equations exactly. J. Res. Nat. Bur. Standards Sect. B 71B, pp. 171–179.
  • E. W. Ng and M. Geller (1969) A table of integrals of the error functions. J. Res. Nat. Bur. Standards Sect B. 73B, pp. 1–20.
  • 18: 3.8 Nonlinear Equations
    The equation to be solved is … Sometimes the equation takes the form … … Consider x = 20 and j = 19 . We have p ( 20 ) = 19 ! and a 19 = 1 + 2 + + 20 = 210 . …
    19: 28.18 Integrals and Integral Equations
    §28.18 Integrals and Integral Equations
    20: 28.35 Tables
    §28.35 Tables
  • Ince (1932) includes eigenvalues a n , b n , and Fourier coefficients for n = 0 or 1 ( 1 ) 6 , q = 0 ( 1 ) 10 ( 2 ) 20 ( 4 ) 40 ; 7D. Also ce n ( x , q ) , se n ( x , q ) for q = 0 ( 1 ) 10 , x = 1 ( 1 ) 90 , corresponding to the eigenvalues in the tables; 5D. Notation: a n = 𝑏𝑒 n 2 q , b n = 𝑏𝑜 n 2 q .

  • 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.