Jump to content

Jacobi–Anger expansion

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, the Jacobi–Anger expansion (or Jacobi–Anger identity) is an expansion of exponentials of trigonometric functions in the basis of their harmonics. It is useful in physics (for example, to convert between plane waves and cylindrical waves), and in signal processing (to describe FM signals). This identity is named after the 19th-century mathematicians Carl Jacobi and Carl Theodor Anger.

The most general identity is given by:[1][2]

where is the -th Bessel function of the first kind and is the imaginary unit, Substituting by , we also get:

Using the relation valid for integer , the expansion becomes:[1][2]

Real-valued expressions

[edit]

The following real-valued variations are often useful as well:[3]

Similarly useful expressions from the Sung Series: [4] [5]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Colton & Kress (1998) p. 32.
  2. ^ a b Cuyt et al. (2008) p. 344.
  3. ^ Abramowitz & Stegun (1965) p. 361, 9.1.42–45
  4. ^ Sung, S.; Hovden, R. (2022). "On Infinite Series of Bessel functions of the First Kind". arXiv:2211.01148 [math-ph].
  5. ^ Watson, G.N. (1922). "A treatise on the theory of bessel functions". Cambridge University Press.

References

[edit]
[edit]