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The duplication formula and the multiplication theorem for the gamma function are the prototypical examples. The duplication formula for the gamma function is (+) = ().It is also called the Legendre duplication formula [1] or Legendre relation, in honor of Adrien-Marie Legendre.
Legendre's formula can be used to prove Kummer's theorem. As one special case, it can be used to prove that if n is a positive integer then 4 divides ( 2 n n ) {\displaystyle {\binom {2n}{n}}} if and only if n is not a power of 2.
The name "Rodrigues formula" was introduced by Heine in 1878, after Hermite pointed out in 1865 that Rodrigues was the first to discover it. The term is also used to describe similar formulas for other orthogonal polynomials. Askey (2005) describes the history of the Rodrigues formula in detail.
Legendre chi function; Legendre duplication formula; Legendre–Papoulis filter; Legendre form; Legendre function; Legendre moment; Legendre polynomials; Legendre pseudospectral method; Legendre rational functions; Legendre relation; Legendre sieve; Legendre symbol; Legendre transformation. Legendre transform (integral transform) Finite ...
The first six Legendre polynomials. In mathematics, Legendre polynomials, named after Adrien-Marie Legendre (1782), are a system of complete and orthogonal polynomials with a wide number of mathematical properties and numerous applications. They can be defined in many ways, and the various definitions highlight different aspects as well as ...
Duplication, or doubling, multiplication by 2; Duplication matrix, a linear transformation dealing with half-vectorization; Doubling the cube, a problem in geometry also known as duplication of the cube; A type of multiplication theorem called the Legendre duplication formula or simply "duplication formula"
The cold case known as the "Crazy Killers of Brabant" revolves around decades-old supermarket robberies that killed 28 people in Belgium.
Classical orthogonal polynomials appeared in the early 19th century in the works of Adrien-Marie Legendre, who introduced the Legendre polynomials. In the late 19th century, the study of continued fractions to solve the moment problem by P. L. Chebyshev and then A.A. Markov and T.J. Stieltjes led to the general notion of orthogonal polynomials.