Askey scheme

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In mathematics, the Askey scheme is a way of organizing orthogonal polynomials of hypergeometric or basic hypergeometric type into a hierarchy. For the classical orthogonal polynomials discussed in Andrews & Askey (1985), the Askey scheme was first drawn by Labelle (1985) and by Askey and Wilson (1985), and has since been extended by Koekoek & Swarttouw (1998) and Koekoek, Lesky & Swarttouw (2010) to cover basic orthogonal polynomials.

Askey scheme for hypergeometric orthogonal polynomials[edit]

Koekoek, Lesky & Swarttouw (2010, p.183) give the following version of the Askey scheme:

Wilson | Racah
Continuous dual Hahn | Continuous Hahn | Hahn | dual Hahn
Meixner–Pollaczek | Jacobi | Pseudo Jacobi | Meixner | Krawtchouk
Laguerre | Bessel | Charlier
Hermite

Here indicates a hypergeometric series representation with parameters

Askey scheme for basic hypergeometric orthogonal polynomials[edit]

Koekoek, Lesky & Swarttouw (2010, p.413) give the following scheme for basic hypergeometric orthogonal polynomials:

43
Askey–Wilson | q-Racah
32
Continuous dual q-Hahn | Continuous q-Hahn | Big q-Jacobi | q-Hahn | dual q-Hahn
21
Al-Salam–Chihara | q-Meixner–Pollaczek | Continuous q-Jacobi | Big q-Laguerre | Little q-Jacobi | q-Meixner | Quantum q-Krawtchouk | q-Krawtchouk | Affine q-Krawtchouk | Dual q-Krawtchouk
20/11
Continuous big q-Hermite | Continuous q-Laguerre | Little q-Laguerre | q-Laguerre | q-Bessel | q-Charlier | Al-Salam–Carlitz I | Al-Salam–Carlitz II
10
Continuous q-Hermite | Stieltjes–Wigert | Discrete q-Hermite I | Discrete q-Hermite II

Completeness[edit]

While there are several approaches to constructing still more general families of orthogonal polynomials, it is usually not possible to extend the Askey scheme by reusing hypergeometric functions of the same form. For instance, one might naively hope to find new examples given by

above which corresponds to the Wilson polynomials. This was ruled out in Cheikh, Lamiri & Ouni (2009) under the assumption that the are degree 1 polynomials such that

for some polynomial .

References[edit]

  • Andrews, George E.; Askey, Richard (1985), "Classical orthogonal polynomials", in Brezinski, C.; Draux, A.; Magnus, Alphonse P.; Maroni, Pascal; Ronveaux, A. (eds.), Polynômes orthogonaux et applications. Proceedings of the Laguerre symposium held at Bar-le-Duc, October 15–18, 1984., Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 1171, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 36–62, doi:10.1007/BFb0076530, ISBN 978-3-540-16059-5, MR 0838970
  • Askey, Richard; Wilson, James (1985), "Some basic hypergeometric orthogonal polynomials that generalize Jacobi polynomials", Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, 54 (319): iv+55, doi:10.1090/memo/0319, ISBN 978-0-8218-2321-7, ISSN 0065-9266, MR 0783216
  • Cheikh, Y. Ben; Lamiri, I.; Ouni, A. (2009), "On Askey-scheme and d-orthogonality, I: A characterization theorem", Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics, 233: 621–629
  • Koekoek, Roelof; Swarttouw, René F. (1998), The Askey-scheme of hypergeometric orthogonal polynomials and its q-analogue, vol. 98–17, Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Information Technology and Systems, Department of Technical Mathematics and Informatics
  • Koekoek, Roelof; Lesky, Peter A.; Swarttouw, René F. (2010), Hypergeometric orthogonal polynomials and their q-analogues, Springer Monographs in Mathematics, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-05014-5, ISBN 978-3-642-05013-8, MR 2656096
  • Koornwinder, Tom H. (1988), "Group theoretic interpretations of Askey's scheme of hypergeometric orthogonal polynomials", Orthogonal polynomials and their applications (Segovia, 1986), Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 1329, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 46–72, doi:10.1007/BFb0083353, ISBN 978-3-540-19489-7, MR 0973421
  • Labelle, Jacques (1985), "Tableau d'Askey", in Brezinski, C.; Draux, A.; Magnus, Alphonse P.; Maroni, Pascal; Ronveaux, A. (eds.), Polynômes Orthogonaux et Applications. Proceedings of the Laguerre Symposium held at Bar-le-Duc, Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 1171, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. xxxvi–xxxvii, doi:10.1007/BFb0076527, ISBN 978-3-540-16059-5, MR 0838967