In mathematics, the Bernoulli polynomials, named after Jacob Bernoulli, combine the Bernoulli numbers and binomial coefficients. They are used for series expansion of functions, and with the Euler–MacLaurin formula.
These polynomials occur in the study of many special functions and, in particular, the Riemann zeta function and the Hurwitz zeta function. They are an Appell sequence (i.e. a Sheffer sequence for the ordinary derivative operator). For the Bernoulli polynomials, the number of crossings of the x-axis in the unit interval does not go up with the degree. In the limit of large degree, they approach, when appropriately scaled, the sine and cosine functions.
A similar set of polynomials, based on a generating function, is the family of Euler polynomials.
The Bernoulli polynomials Bn can be defined by a generating function. They also admit a variety of derived representations.
The generating function for the Bernoulli polynomials is
The generating function for the Euler polynomials isThe Bernoulli polynomials are also given by
where D = d/dx is differentiation with respect to x and the fraction is expanded as a formal power series. It follows that cf. § Integrals below. By the same token, the Euler polynomials are given byThe Bernoulli polynomials are also the unique polynomials determined by
The integral transform
on polynomials f, simply amounts to This can be used to produce the inversion formulae below.In, it is deduced and proved that the Bernoulli polynomials can be obtained by the following integral recurrence
An explicit formula for the Bernoulli polynomials is given by
That is similar to the series expression for the Hurwitz zeta function in the complex plane. Indeed, there is the relationship
where is the Hurwitz zeta function. The latter generalizes the Bernoulli polynomials, allowing for non-integer values of n.The inner sum may be understood to be the nth forward difference of that is,
where is the forward difference operator. Thus, one may writeThis formula may be derived from an identity appearing above as follows. Since the forward difference operator Δ equals
where D is differentiation with respect to x, we have, from the Mercator series,As long as this operates on an mth-degree polynomial such as one may let n go from 0 only up to m.
An integral representation for the Bernoulli polynomials is given by the Nörlund–Rice integral, which follows from the expression as a finite difference.
An explicit formula for the Euler polynomials is given by
The above follows analogously, using the fact that
Using either the above integral representation of or the identity , we have
(assuming 00 = 1).The Bernoulli numbers are given by
This definition gives for
An alternate convention defines the Bernoulli numbers as
The two conventions differ only when since
The Euler numbers are given by
The first few Bernoulli polynomials are:
The first few Euler polynomials are:
At higher n the amount of variation in between and gets large. For instance, but Lehmer (1940) showed that the maximum value (Mn) of between 0 and 1 obeys
unless n is 2 modulo 4, in which case (where is the Riemann zeta function), while the minimum (mn) obeys unless n = 0 modulo 4 , in which caseThese limits are quite close to the actual maximum and minimum, and Lehmer gives more accurate limits as well.
The Bernoulli and Euler polynomials obey many relations from umbral calculus:
(Δ is the forward difference operator). Also, These polynomial sequences are Appell sequences:The Fourier series of the Bernoulli polynomials is also a Dirichlet series, given by the expansion
Note the simple large n limit to suitably scaled trigonometric functions.This is a special case of the analogous form for the Hurwitz zeta function
This expansion is valid only for 0 ≤ x ≤ 1 when n ≥ 2 and is valid for 0 < x < 1 when n = 1.
The Fourier series of the Euler polynomials may also be calculated. Defining the functions
for , the Euler polynomial has the Fourier series Note that the and are odd and even, respectively:They are related to the Legendre chi function as
The Bernoulli and Euler polynomials may be inverted to express the monomial in terms of the polynomials.
Specifically, evidently from the above section on integral operators, it follows that
andThe Bernoulli polynomials may be expanded in terms of the falling factorial as
where and denotes the Stirling number of the second kind. The above may be inverted to express the falling factorial in terms of the Bernoulli polynomials: where denotes the Stirling number of the first kind.The multiplication theorems were given by Joseph Ludwig Raabe in 1851:
For a natural number m≥1,
Two definite integrals relating the Bernoulli and Euler polynomials to the Bernoulli and Euler numbers are:
Another integral formula states
with the special case for
A periodic Bernoulli polynomial Pn(x) is a Bernoulli polynomial evaluated at the fractional part of the argument x. These functions are used to provide the remainder term in the Euler–Maclaurin formula relating sums to integrals. The first polynomial is a sawtooth function.
Strictly these functions are not polynomials at all and more properly should be termed the periodic Bernoulli functions, and P0(x) is not even a function, being the derivative of a sawtooth and so a Dirac comb.
The following properties are of interest, valid for all :
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