MATLAB Function Reference |
Syntax
J = besselj(nu,Z) Bessel function of the 1st kind
Y = bessely(nu,Z) Bessel function of the 2nd kind
J = besselj(nu,Z,1)
Y = bessely(nu,Z,1)
[J,ierr] = besselj(nu,Z)
[Y,ierr] = bessely(nu,Z)
Definition
where is a real constant, is called Bessel's equation, and its solutions are known as Bessel functions.
and form a fundamental set of solutions of Bessel's equation for noninteger . is defined by:
is a second solution of Bessel's equation that is linearly independent of and defined by:
Description
J = besselj(nu,Z)
computes Bessel functions of the first kind, for each element of the complex array Z
. The order nu
need not be an integer, but must be real. The argument Z
can be complex. The result is real where Z
is positive.
If nu
and Z
are arrays of the same size, the result is also that size. If either input is a scalar, it is expanded to the other input's size. If one input is a row vector and the other is a column vector, the result is a two-dimensional table of function values.
Y = bessely(nu,Z)
computes Bessel functions of the second kind, for real, nonnegative order nu
and argument Z
.
computes J = besselj(nu,Z,1)
besselj(nu,Z).
*exp(-abs(imag(Z)))
.
Y = bessely(nu,Z,1)
computes bessely(nu,Z).
*exp(-abs(imag(Z)))
.
[J,ierr] = besselj(nu,Z) and [Y,ierr] = bessely(nu,Z)
also return an array of error flags.
ierr = 1 |
|
ierr = 2 |
|
ierr = 3 |
|
ierr = 4 |
|
ierr = 5 |
Remarks
The Bessel functions are related to the Hankel functions, also called Bessel functions of the third kind:
where is besselj
, and is bessely
. The Hankel functions also form a fundamental set of solutions to Bessel's equation (see besselh
).
Examples
format long z = (0:0.2:1)'; besselj(1,z) ans = 0 0.09950083263924 0.19602657795532 0.28670098806392 0.36884204609417 0.44005058574493 bessely(1,z) ans = -Inf -3.32382498811185 -1.78087204427005 -1.26039134717739 -0.97814417668336 -0.78121282130029
besselj(3:9,(0:.2:10)')
generates the entire table on page 398 of Abramowitz and Stegun, Handbook of Mathematical Functions.
bessely(3:9,(0:.2:10)')
generates the entire table on page 399 of Abramowitz and Stegun, Handbook of Mathematical Functions.
Algorithm
The besselj
and bessely
functions use a Fortran MEX-file to call a library developed by D. E. Amos [3] [4].
See Also
References
[1] Abramowitz, M. and I.A. Stegun, Handbook of Mathematical Functions, National Bureau of Standards, Applied Math. Series #55, Dover Publications, 1965, sections 9.1.1, 9.1.89 and 9.12, formulas 9.1.10 and 9.2.5.
[2] Carrier, Krook, and Pearson, Functions of a Complex Variable: Theory and Technique, Hod Books, 1983, section 5.5.
[3] Amos, D. E., "A Subroutine Package for Bessel Functions of a Complex Argument and Nonnegative Order," Sandia National Laboratory Report, SAND85-1018, May, 1985.
[4] Amos, D. E., "A Portable Package for Bessel Functions of a Complex Argument and Nonnegative Order," Trans. Math. Software, 1986.
besseli, besselk | beta, betainc, betaln |