In integral calculus, an elliptic integral is one of a number of related functions defined as the value of certain integrals, which were first studied by Giulio Fagnano and Leonhard Euler (c. 1750). Their name originates from their originally arising in connection with the problem of finding the arc length of an ellipse.
Modern mathematics defines an "elliptic integral" as any functionf which can be expressed in the form
where R is a rational function of its two arguments, P is a polynomial of degree 3 or 4 with no repeated roots, and c is a constant.
In general, integrals in this form cannot be expressed in terms of elementary functions. Exceptions to this general rule are when P has repeated roots, or when R(x, y) contains no odd powers of y or if the integral is pseudo-elliptic. However, with the appropriate reduction formula, every elliptic integral can be brought into a form that involves integrals over rational functions and the three Legendre canonical forms, also known as the elliptic integrals of the first, second and third kind.
Besides the Legendre form given below, the elliptic integrals may also be expressed in Carlson symmetric form. Additional insight into the theory of the elliptic integral may be gained through the study of the Schwarz–Christoffel mapping. Historically, elliptic functions were discovered as inverse functions of elliptic integrals.
Incomplete elliptic integrals are functions of two arguments; complete elliptic integrals are functions of a single argument. These arguments are expressed in a variety of different but equivalent ways as they give the same elliptic integral. Most texts adhere to a canonical naming scheme, using the following naming conventions.
Each of the above three quantities is completely determined by any of the others (given that they are non-negative). Thus, they can be used interchangeably.
The other argument can likewise be expressed as φ, the amplitude, or as x or u, where x = sin φ = sn u and sn is one of the Jacobian elliptic functions.
Specifying the value of any one of these quantities determines the others. Note that u also depends on m. Some additional relationships involving u include
The latter is sometimes called the delta amplitude and written as Δ(φ) = dn u. Sometimes the literature also refers to the complementary parameter, the complementary modulus, or the complementary modular angle. These are further defined in the article on quarter periods.
In this notation, the use of a vertical bar as delimiter indicates that the argument following it is the "parameter" (as defined above), while the backslash indicates that it is the modular angle. The use of a semicolon implies that the argument preceding it is the sine of the amplitude:
This potentially confusing use of different argument delimiters is traditional in elliptic integrals and much of the notation is compatible with that used in the reference book by Abramowitz and Stegun and that used in the integral tables by Gradshteyn and Ryzhik.
There are still other conventions for the notation of elliptic integrals employed in the literature. The notation with interchanged arguments, F(k, φ), is often encountered; and similarly E(k, φ) for the integral of the second kind. Abramowitz and Stegun substitute the integral of the first kind, F(φ, k), for the argument φ in their definition of the integrals of the second and third kinds, unless this argument is followed by a vertical bar: i.e. E(F(φ, k) | k2) for E(φ | k2). Moreover, their complete integrals employ the parameterk2 as argument in place of the modulus k, i.e. K(k2) rather than K(k). And the integral of the third kind defined by Gradshteyn and Ryzhik, Π(φ, n, k), puts the amplitude φ first and not the "characteristic" n.
Thus one must be careful with the notation when using these functions, because various reputable references and software packages use different conventions in the definitions of the elliptic functions. For example, Wolfram's Mathematica software and Wolfram Alpha define the complete elliptic integral of the first kind in terms of the parameter m, instead of the elliptic modulus k.
The incomplete elliptic integral of the first kindF is defined as
This is Legendre's trigonometric form of the elliptic integral; substituting t = sin θ and x = sin φ, one obtains Jacobi's algebraic form:
Equivalently, in terms of the amplitude and modular angle one has:
With x = sn(u, k) one has:
demonstrating that this Jacobian elliptic function is a simple inverse of the incomplete elliptic integral of the first kind.
The incomplete elliptic integral of the first kind has following addition theorem[citation needed]:
The incomplete elliptic integral of the third kindΠ is
or
The number n is called the characteristic and can take on any value, independently of the other arguments. Note though that the value Π(1; π/2 | m) is infinite, for any m.
A relation with the Jacobian elliptic functions is
The meridian arc length from the equator to latitude φ is also related to a special case of Π:
Elliptic Integrals are said to be 'complete' when the amplitude φ = π/2 and therefore x = 1. The complete elliptic integral of the first kindK may thus be defined as
or more compactly in terms of the incomplete integral of the first kind as
The complete elliptic integral of the first kind is sometimes called the quarter period. It can be computed very efficiently in terms of the arithmetic–geometric mean:[1]
If k2 = λ(i√r) and (where λ is the modular lambda function), then K(k) is expressible in closed form in terms of the gamma function.[2] For example, r = 2, r = 3 and r = 7 give, respectively,[3]
This approximation has a relative precision better than 3×10−4 for k < 1/2. Keeping only the first two terms is correct to 0.01 precision for k < 1/2.[citation needed]
Here, we use the complete elliptic integral of the first kind with the parameter instead, because the squaring function introduces problems when inverting in the complex plane. So let
The complete elliptic integral of the second kindE is defined as
or more compactly in terms of the incomplete integral of the second kind E(φ,k) as
For an ellipse with semi-major axis a and semi-minor axis b and eccentricity e = √1 − b2/a2, the complete elliptic integral of the second kind E(e) is equal to one quarter of the circumferenceC of the ellipse measured in units of the semi-major axis a. In other words:
The complete elliptic integral of the second kind can be expressed as a power series[9]
which is equivalent to
In terms of the Gauss hypergeometric function, the complete elliptic integral of the second kind can be expressed as
Like the integral of the first kind, the complete elliptic integral of the second kind can be computed very efficiently using the arithmetic–geometric mean.[1]
Define sequences an and gn, where a0 = 1, g0 = √1 − k2 = k′ and the recurrence relations an + 1 = an + gn/2, gn + 1 = √an gn hold. Furthermore, define
By definition,
Also
Then
In practice, the arithmetic-geometric mean would simply be computed up to some limit. This formula converges quadratically for all |k| ≤ 1. To speed up computation further, the relation cn + 1 = cn2/4an + 1 can be used.
Furthermore, if k2 = λ(i√r) and (where λ is the modular lambda function), then E(k) is expressible in closed form in terms of
and hence can be computed without the need for the infinite summation term. For example, r = 1, r = 3 and r = 7 give, respectively,[10]
The complete elliptic integral of the third kindΠ can be defined as
Note that sometimes the elliptic integral of the third kind is defined with an inverse sign for the characteristicn,
Just like the complete elliptic integrals of the first and second kind, the complete elliptic integral of the third kind can be computed very efficiently using the arithmetic-geometric mean.[1]
In 1829, Jacobi defined the Jacobi zeta function:
It is periodic in with minimal period . It is related to the Jacobi zn function by . In the literature (e.g. Whittaker and Watson (1927)), sometimes means Wikipedia's . Some authors (e.g. King (1924)) use for both Wikipedia's and .
The Legendre's relation or Legendre Identity shows the relation of the integrals K and E of an elliptic modulus and its anti-related counterpart[11][12] in an integral equation of second degree:
For two modules that are Pythagorean counterparts to each other, this relation is valid:
For example:
And for two modules that are tangential counterparts to each other, the following relationship is valid:
For example:
The Legendre's relation for tangential modular counterparts results directly from the Legendre's identity for Pythagorean modular counterparts by using the Landen modular transformation on the Pythagorean counter modulus.
For the lemniscatic case, the elliptic modulus or specific eccentricity ε is equal to half the square root of two. Legendre's identity for the lemniscatic case can be proved as follows:
According to the Chain rule these derivatives hold:
Now the modular general case[13][14] is worked out. For this purpose, the derivatives of the complete elliptic integrals are derived after the modulus and then they are combined. And then the Legendre's identity balance is determined.
Because the derivative of the circle function is the negative product of the identical mapping function and the reciprocal of the circle function:
These are the derivatives of K and E shown in this article in the sections above:
In combination with the derivative of the circle function these derivatives are valid then:
Legendre's identity includes products of any two complete elliptic integrals. For the derivation of the function side from the equation scale of Legendre's identity, the Product rule is now applied in the following:
Of these three equations, adding the top two equations and subtracting the bottom equation gives this result:
In relation to the the equation balance constantly gives the value zero.
The previously determined result shall be combined with the Legendre equation to the modulus that is worked out in the section before:
The combination of the last two formulas gives the following result:
Because if the derivative of a continuous function constantly takes the value zero, then the concerned function is a constant function. This means that this function results in the same function value for each abscissa value and the associated function graph is therefore a horizontal straight line.
^Borwein, Jonathan M.; Borwein, Peter B. (1987). Pi and the AGM: A Study in Analytic Number Theory and Computational Complexity (First ed.). Wiley-Interscience. ISBN0-471-83138-7. p. 296
^Borwein, Jonathan M.; Borwein, Peter B. (1987). Pi and the AGM: A Study in Analytic Number Theory and Computational Complexity (First ed.). Wiley-Interscience. ISBN0-471-83138-7. p. 298
^Borwein, Jonathan M.; Borwein, Peter B. (1987). Pi and the AGM: A Study in Analytic Number Theory and Computational Complexity (First ed.). Wiley-Interscience. ISBN0-471-83138-7. p. 26, 161
Byrd, P. F.; Friedman, M.D. (1971). Handbook of Elliptic Integrals for Engineers and Scientists (2nd ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN0-387-05318-2.