Inverse tangent integral: Difference between revisions

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Template:Short description The inverse tangent integral is a special function, defined by:

Ti2(x)=0xarctanttdt

Equivalently, it can be defined by a power series, or in terms of the dilogarithm, a closely related special function.

Definition

The inverse tangent integral is defined by:

Ti2(x)=0xarctanttdt

The arctangent is taken to be the principal branch; that is, −Template:Pi/2 < arctan(t) < Template:Pi/2 for all real t.[1]

Its power series representation is

Ti2(x)=xx332+x552x772+

which is absolutely convergent for |x|1.[1]

The inverse tangent integral is closely related to the dilogarithm Li2(z)=n=1znn2 and can be expressed simply in terms of it:

Ti2(z)=12i(Li2(iz)Li2(iz))

That is,

Ti2(x)=Im(Li2(ix))

for all real x.[1]

Properties

The inverse tangent integral is an odd function:[1]

Ti2(x)=Ti2(x)

The values of Ti2(x) and Ti2(1/x) are related by the identity

Ti2(x)Ti2(1x)=π2logx

valid for all x > 0 (or, more generally, for Re(x) > 0). This can be proven by differentiating and using the identity arctan(t)+arctan(1/t)=π/2.[2][3]

The special value Ti2(1) is Catalan's constant 1132+152172+0.915966.[3]

Generalizations

Similar to the polylogarithm Lin(z)=k=1zkkn, the function

Tin(x)=k=0(1)kx2k+1(2k+1)n=xx33n+x55nx77n+

is defined analogously. This satisfies the recurrence relation:[4]

Tin(x)=0xTin1(t)tdt

By this series representation it can be seen that the special values Tin(1)=β(n), where β(s) represents the Dirichlet beta function.

Relation to other special functions

The inverse tangent integral is related to the Legendre chi function χ2(x)=x+x332+x552+ by:[1]

Ti2(x)=iχ2(ix)

Note that χ2(x) can be expressed as 0xartanhttdt, similar to the inverse tangent integral but with the inverse hyperbolic tangent instead.

The inverse tangent integral can also be written in terms of the Lerch transcendent Φ(z,s,a)=n=0zn(n+a)s:[5]

Ti2(x)=14xΦ(x2,2,1/2)

History

The notation Ti2 and Tin is due to Lewin. Spence (1809)[6] studied the function, using the notation Cn(x). The function was also studied by Ramanujan.[2]

References

Template:Reflist