Legendre Polynomials
Legendre polynomials
[lə′zhän·drə ‚päl·i′nō·mē·əlz]Legendre Polynomials
a system of polynomials of successively increasing degree. The polynomials were first investigated by A. Legendre and P. Laplace independently of each other between 1782 and 1785. For n = 0, 1, 2, …, the Legendre polynomials Pn(x) can be defined by the formula
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The first few polynomials are
p0 (x) = 1
p1 (x) = x
p2 (x) = 1/2(3x2 - 1)
p3 (x) = 1/2(5x2 - 3x)
p4 (x) = 1/8(35x4 - 30x2 + 3)
p5 (x) = 1/8(63x5 - 70x3 + 15x)
All the zeros of P n (x) are real, lie in the interval [–1, + 1], and alternate with the zeros of Pn + 1 (x). The Legendre polynomials are a complete set of orthogonal polynomials on the interval [–1, + 1]. Thus, it is possible to expand an arbitrary function /(jc) integrable over the interval [– 1, +1] in a series of Legendre polynomials:
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where
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The type of convergence of this series is roughly the same as that of a Fourier series. The Legendre polynomials are given explicitly by the formula

The generating function is
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that is, the Legendre polynomials are the coefficients in the expansion of this function in powers of t. They are recursively defined by
nPn (x) + (n - 1)Pn-2 (x) - (2n - 1)xPn-1 (x) = 0
Pn (x)satisfies the differential equation

which arises when separating the variables in Laplace’s equation in spherical coordinates.
REFERENCES
Janke, E., F. Emde, and F. Lösch. Spetsial’nye funktsii; grafiki, tablitsy, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1968. (Translated from German.)Lebedev, N. N. Spetsial’nye funktsii i ikh prilozheniia, 2nd ed. MoscowLeningrad, 1963.
V. I. BITIUTSKOV