Jacobi elliptic functions

In mathematics, the Jacobi elliptic functions are a set of basic elliptic functions. They are found in the description of the motion of a pendulum, as well as in the design of electronic elliptic filters. While trigonometric functions are defined with reference to a circle, the Jacobi elliptic functions are a generalization which refer to other conic sections, the ellipse in particular. The relation to trigonometric functions is contained in the notation, for example, by the matching notation for . The Jacobi elliptic functions are used more often in practical problems than the Weierstrass elliptic functions as they do not require notions of complex analysis to be defined and/or understood. They were introduced by Carl Gustav Jakob Jacobi (1829). Carl Friedrich Gauss had already studied special Jacobi elliptic functions in 1797, the lemniscate elliptic functions in particular,[1] but his work was published much later.

Overview

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The fundamental rectangle in the complex plane of  

There are twelve Jacobi elliptic functions denoted by  , where   and   are any of the letters  ,  ,  , and  . (Functions of the form   are trivially set to unity for notational completeness.)   is the argument, and   is the parameter, both of which may be complex. In fact, the Jacobi elliptic functions are meromorphic in both   and  .[2] The distribution of the zeros and poles in the  -plane is well-known. However, questions of the distribution of the zeros and poles in the  -plane remain to be investigated.[2]

In the complex plane of the argument  , the twelve functions form a repeating lattice of simple poles and zeroes.[3] Depending on the function, one repeating parallelogram, or unit cell, will have sides of length   or   on the real axis, and   or   on the imaginary axis, where   and   are known as the quarter periods with   being the elliptic integral of the first kind. The nature of the unit cell can be determined by inspecting the "auxiliary rectangle" (generally a parallelogram), which is a rectangle formed by the origin   at one corner, and   as the diagonally opposite corner. As in the diagram, the four corners of the auxiliary rectangle are named  ,  ,  , and  , going counter-clockwise from the origin. The function   will have a zero at the   corner and a pole at the   corner. The twelve functions correspond to the twelve ways of arranging these poles and zeroes in the corners of the rectangle.

When the argument   and parameter   are real, with  ,   and   will be real and the auxiliary parallelogram will in fact be a rectangle, and the Jacobi elliptic functions will all be real valued on the real line.

Since the Jacobian elliptic functions are doubly periodic in  , they factor through a torus – in effect, their domain can be taken to be a torus, just as cosine and sine are in effect defined on a circle. Instead of having only one circle, we now have the product of two circles, one real and the other imaginary. The complex plane can be replaced by a complex torus. The circumference of the first circle is   and the second  , where   and   are the quarter periods. Each function has two zeroes and two poles at opposite positions on the torus. Among the points  ,  ,  ,   there is one zero and one pole.

The Jacobian elliptic functions are then doubly periodic, meromorphic functions satisfying the following properties:

  • There is a simple zero at the corner  , and a simple pole at the corner  .
  • The complex number   is equal to half the period of the function  ; that is, the function   is periodic in the direction  , with the period being  . The function   is also periodic in the other two directions   and  , with periods such that   and   are quarter periods.
Jacobi elliptic function  
Jacobi elliptic function  
Jacobi elliptic function  
Jacobi elliptic function  
Plots of four Jacobi Elliptic Functions in the complex plane of  , illustrating their double periodic behavior. Images generated using a version of the domain coloring method.[4] All have values of   equal to  .

Notation

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The elliptic functions can be given in a variety of notations, which can make the subject unnecessarily confusing. Elliptic functions are functions of two variables. The first variable might be given in terms of the amplitude  , or more commonly, in terms of   given below. The second variable might be given in terms of the parameter  , or as the elliptic modulus  , where  , or in terms of the modular angle  , where  . The complements of   and   are defined as   and  . These four terms are used below without comment to simplify various expressions.

The twelve Jacobi elliptic functions are generally written as   where   and   are any of the letters  ,  ,  , and  . Functions of the form   are trivially set to unity for notational completeness. The “major” functions are generally taken to be  ,   and   from which all other functions can be derived and expressions are often written solely in terms of these three functions, however, various symmetries and generalizations are often most conveniently expressed using the full set. (This notation is due to Gudermann and Glaisher and is not Jacobi's original notation.)

Throughout this article,  .

The functions are notationally related to each other by the multiplication rule: (arguments suppressed)

 

from which other commonly used relationships can be derived:

 
 
 

The multiplication rule follows immediately from the identification of the elliptic functions with the Neville theta functions[5]

 

Also note that:

 

Definition in terms of inverses of elliptic integrals

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Model of the Jacobi amplitude (measured along vertical axis) as a function of independent variables u and the modulus k

There is a definition, relating the elliptic functions to the inverse of the incomplete elliptic integral of the first kind  . These functions take the parameters   and   as inputs. The   that satisfies

 

is called the Jacobi amplitude:

 

In this framework, the elliptic sine sn u (Latin: sinus amplitudinis) is given by

 

and the elliptic cosine cn u (Latin: cosinus amplitudinis) is given by

 

and the delta amplitude dn u (Latin: delta amplitudinis)[note 1]

 

In the above, the value   is a free parameter, usually taken to be real such that   (but can be complex in general), and so the elliptic functions can be thought of as being given by two variables,   and the parameter  . The remaining nine elliptic functions are easily built from the above three ( ,  ,  ), and are given in a section below. Note that when  , that   then equals the quarter period  .

In the most general setting,   is a multivalued function (in  ) with infinitely many logarithmic branch points (the branches differ by integer multiples of  ), namely the points   and   where  .[6] This multivalued function can be made single-valued by cutting the complex plane along the line segments joining these branch points (the cutting can be done in non-equivalent ways, giving non-equivalent single-valued functions), thus making   analytic everywhere except on the branch cuts. In contrast,   and other elliptic functions have no branch points, give consistent values for every branch of  , and are meromorphic in the whole complex plane. Since every elliptic function is meromorphic in the whole complex plane (by definition),   (when considered as a single-valued function) is not an elliptic function.

However, a particular cutting for   can be made in the  -plane by line segments from   to   with  ; then it only remains to define   at the branch cuts by continuity from some direction. Then   becomes single-valued and singly-periodic in   with the minimal period   and it has singularities at the logarithmic branch points mentioned above. If   and  ,   is continuous in   on the real line. When  , the branch cuts of   in the  -plane cross the real line at   for  ; therefore for  ,   is not continuous in   on the real line and jumps by   on the discontinuities.

But defining   this way gives rise to very complicated branch cuts in the  -plane (not the  -plane); they have not been fully described as of yet.

Let

 

be the incomplete elliptic integral of the second kind with parameter  .

Then the Jacobi epsilon function can be defined as

 

for   and   and by analytic continuation in each of the variables otherwise: the Jacobi epsilon function is meromorphic in the whole complex plane (in both   and  ). Alternatively, throughout both the  -plane and  -plane,[7]

 

  is well-defined in this way because all residues of   are zero, so the integral is path-independent. So the Jacobi epsilon relates the incomplete elliptic integral of the first kind to the incomplete elliptic integral of the second kind:

 

The Jacobi epsilon function is not an elliptic function, but it appears when differentiating the Jacobi elliptic functions with respect to the parameter.

The Jacobi zn function is defined by

 

It is a singly periodic function which is meromorphic in  , but not in   (due to the branch cuts of   and  ). Its minimal period in   is  . It is related to the Jacobi zeta function by  

Historically, the Jacobi elliptic functions were first defined by using the amplitude. In more modern texts on elliptic functions, the Jacobi elliptic functions are defined by other means, for example by ratios of theta functions (see below), and the amplitude is ignored.

In modern terms, the relation to elliptic integrals would be expressed by   (or  ) instead of  .

Definition as trigonometry: the Jacobi ellipse

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Plot of the Jacobi ellipse (x2 + y2/b2 = 1, b real) and the twelve Jacobi elliptic functions pq(u,m) for particular values of angle φ and parameter b. The solid curve is the ellipse, with m = 1 − 1/b2 and u = F(φ,m) where F(⋅,⋅) is the elliptic integral of the first kind (with parameter  ). The dotted curve is the unit circle. Tangent lines from the circle and ellipse at x = cd crossing the x-axis at dc are shown in light grey.

  are defined on the unit circle, with radius r = 1 and angle   arc length of the unit circle measured from the positive x-axis. Similarly, Jacobi elliptic functions are defined on the unit ellipse,[citation needed] with a = 1. Let

 

then:

 

For each angle   the parameter

 

(the incomplete elliptic integral of the first kind) is computed. On the unit circle ( ),   would be an arc length. However, the relation of   to the arc length of an ellipse is more complicated.[8]

Let   be a point on the ellipse, and let   be the point where the unit circle intersects the line between   and the origin  . Then the familiar relations from the unit circle:

 

read for the ellipse:

 

So the projections of the intersection point   of the line   with the unit circle on the x- and y-axes are simply   and  . These projections may be interpreted as 'definition as trigonometry'. In short:

 

For the   and   value of the point   with   and parameter   we get, after inserting the relation:

 

into:   that:

 

The latter relations for the x- and y-coordinates of points on the unit ellipse may be considered as generalization of the relations   for the coordinates of points on the unit circle.

The following table summarizes the expressions for all Jacobi elliptic functions pq(u,m) in the variables (x,y,r) and (φ,dn) with  

Jacobi elliptic functions pq[u,m] as functions of {x,y,r} and {φ,dn}
q
c s n d
p
c 1      
s   1    
n     1  
d       1

Definition in terms of the Jacobi theta functions

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Using elliptic integrals

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Equivalently, Jacobi's elliptic functions can be defined in terms of the theta functions.[9] With   such that  , let

 
 
 
 

and  ,  ,  . Then with  ,  ,   and  ,

 

The Jacobi zn function can be expressed by theta functions as well:

 

where   denotes the partial derivative with respect to the first variable.

Using modular inversion

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In fact, the definition of the Jacobi elliptic functions in Whittaker & Watson is stated a little bit differently than the one given above (but it's equivalent to it) and relies on modular inversion: The function  , defined by

 
The region   in the complex plane. It is bounded by two semicircles from below, by a ray from the left and by a ray from the right.
 

assumes every value in   once and only once[10] in

 

where   is the upper half-plane in the complex plane,   is the boundary of   and

 

In this way, each   can be associated with one and only one  . Then Whittaker & Watson define the Jacobi elliptic functions by

 

where  . In the book, they place an additional restriction on   (that  ), but it is in fact not a necessary restriction (see the Cox reference). Also, if   or  , the Jacobi elliptic functions degenerate to non-elliptic functions which is described below.

Definition in terms of Neville theta functions

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The Jacobi elliptic functions can be defined very simply using the Neville theta functions:[11]

 

Simplifications of complicated products of the Jacobi elliptic functions are often made easier using these identities.

Jacobi transformations

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The Jacobi imaginary transformations

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Plot of the degenerate Jacobi curve (x2 + y2/b2 = 1, b = ∞) and the twelve Jacobi Elliptic functions pq(u,1) for a particular value of angle φ. The solid curve is the degenerate ellipse (x2 = 1) with m = 1 and u = F(φ,1) where F(⋅,⋅) is the elliptic integral of the first kind. The dotted curve is the unit circle. Since these are the Jacobi functions for m = 0 (circular trigonometric functions) but with imaginary arguments, they correspond to the six hyperbolic trigonometric functions.

The Jacobi imaginary transformations relate various functions of the imaginary variable i u or, equivalently, relations between various values of the m parameter. In terms of the major functions:[12]: 506 

 
 
 

Using the multiplication rule, all other functions may be expressed in terms of the above three. The transformations may be generally written as  . The following table gives the   for the specified pq(u,m).[11] (The arguments   are suppressed)

Jacobi Imaginary transformations  
q
c s n d
p
c 1 i ns nc nd
s i sn 1 i sc i sd
n cn i cs 1 cd
d dn i ds dc 1

Since the hyperbolic trigonometric functions are proportional to the circular trigonometric functions with imaginary arguments, it follows that the Jacobi functions will yield the hyperbolic functions for m=1.[5]: 249  In the figure, the Jacobi curve has degenerated to two vertical lines at x = 1 and x = −1.

The Jacobi real transformations

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The Jacobi real transformations[5]: 308  yield expressions for the elliptic functions in terms with alternate values of m. The transformations may be generally written as  . The following table gives the   for the specified pq(u,m).[11] (The arguments   are suppressed)

Jacobi real transformations  
q
c s n d
p
c        
s        
n        
d        

Other Jacobi transformations

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Jacobi's real and imaginary transformations can be combined in various ways to yield three more simple transformations .[5]: 214  The real and imaginary transformations are two transformations in a group (D3 or anharmonic group) of six transformations. If

 

is the transformation for the m parameter in the real transformation, and

 

is the transformation of m in the imaginary transformation, then the other transformations can be built up by successive application of these two basic transformations, yielding only three more possibilities:

 

These five transformations, along with the identity transformation (μU(m) = m) yield the six-element group. With regard to the Jacobi elliptic functions, the general transformation can be expressed using just three functions:

 
 
 

where i = U, I, IR, R, RI, or RIR, identifying the transformation, γi is a multiplication factor common to these three functions, and the prime indicates the transformed function. The other nine transformed functions can be built up from the above three. The reason the cs, ns, ds functions were chosen to represent the transformation is that the other functions will be ratios of these three (except for their inverses) and the multiplication factors will cancel.

The following table lists the multiplication factors for the three ps functions, the transformed m's, and the transformed function names for each of the six transformations.[5]: 214  (As usual, k2 = m, 1 − k2 = k12 = m′ and the arguments ( ) are suppressed)

Parameters for the six transformations
Transformation i     cs' ns' ds'
U 1 m cs ns ds
I i m' ns cs ds
IR i k −m'/m ds cs ns
R k 1/m ds ns cs
RI i k1 1/m' ns ds cs
RIR k1 −m/m' cs ds ns

Thus, for example, we may build the following table for the RIR transformation.[11] The transformation is generally written   (The arguments   are suppressed)

The RIR transformation  
q
c s n d
p
c 1 k' cs cd cn
s   sc 1   sd   sn
n dc   ds 1 dn
d nc   ns nd 1

The value of the Jacobi transformations is that any set of Jacobi elliptic functions with any real-valued parameter m can be converted into another set for which   and, for real values of u, the function values will be real.[5]: p. 215 

Amplitude transformations

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In the following, the second variable is suppressed and is equal to  :

 
 

where both identities are valid for all   such that both sides are well-defined.

With

 

we have

 
 
 

where all the identities are valid for all   such that both sides are well-defined.

The Jacobi hyperbola

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Plot of the Jacobi hyperbola (x2 + y2/b2 = 1, b imaginary) and the twelve Jacobi Elliptic functions pq(u,m) for particular values of angle φ and parameter b. The solid curve is the hyperbola, with m = 1 − 1/b2 and u = F(φ,m) where F(⋅,⋅) is the elliptic integral of the first kind. The dotted curve is the unit circle. For the ds-dc triangle, σ =  sin(φ)cos(φ).

Introducing complex numbers, our ellipse has an associated hyperbola:

 

from applying Jacobi's imaginary transformation[11] to the elliptic functions in the above equation for x and y.

 

It follows that we can put  . So our ellipse has a dual ellipse with m replaced by 1-m. This leads to the complex torus mentioned in the Introduction.[13] Generally, m may be a complex number, but when m is real and m<0, the curve is an ellipse with major axis in the x direction. At m=0 the curve is a circle, and for 0<m<1, the curve is an ellipse with major axis in the y direction. At m = 1, the curve degenerates into two vertical lines at x = ±1. For m > 1, the curve is a hyperbola. When m is complex but not real, x or y or both are complex and the curve cannot be described on a real x-y diagram.

Minor functions

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Reversing the order of the two letters of the function name results in the reciprocals of the three functions above:

 

Similarly, the ratios of the three primary functions correspond to the first letter of the numerator followed by the first letter of the denominator:

 

More compactly, we have

 

where p and q are any of the letters s, c, d.

Periodicity, poles, and residues

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Plots of the phase for the twelve Jacobi Elliptic functions pq(u,m) as a function complex argument u, with poles and zeroes indicated. The plots are over one full cycle in the real and imaginary directions with the colored portion indicating phase according to the color wheel at the lower right (which replaces the trivial dd function). Regions with absolute value below 1/3 are colored black, roughly indicating the location of a zero, while regions with absolute value above 3 are colored white, roughly indicating the position of a pole. All plots use m = 2/3 with K = K(m), K′ = K(1 − m), K(⋅) being the complete elliptic integral of the first kind. Arrows at the poles point in direction of zero phase. Right and left arrows imply positive and negative real residues respectively. Up and down arrows imply positive and negative imaginary residues respectively.

In the complex plane of the argument u, the Jacobi elliptic functions form a repeating pattern of poles (and zeroes). The residues of the poles all have the same absolute value, differing only in sign. Each function pq(u,m) has an "inverse function" (in the multiplicative sense) qp(u,m) in which the positions of the poles and zeroes are exchanged. The periods of repetition are generally different in the real and imaginary directions, hence the use of the term "doubly periodic" to describe them.

For the Jacobi amplitude and the Jacobi epsilon function:

 
 
 
 

where   is the complete elliptic integral of the second kind with parameter  .

The double periodicity of the Jacobi elliptic functions may be expressed as:

 

where α and β are any pair of integers. K(⋅) is the complete elliptic integral of the first kind, also known as the quarter period. The power of negative unity (γ) is given in the following table:

 
q
c s n d
p
c 0 β α + β α
s β 0 α α + β
n α + β α 0 β
d α α + β β 0

When the factor (−1)γ is equal to −1, the equation expresses quasi-periodicity. When it is equal to unity, it expresses full periodicity. It can be seen, for example, that for the entries containing only α when α is even, full periodicity is expressed by the above equation, and the function has full periods of 4K(m) and 2iK(1 − m). Likewise, functions with entries containing only β have full periods of 2K(m) and 4iK(1 − m), while those with α + β have full periods of 4K(m) and 4iK(1 − m).

In the diagram on the right, which plots one repeating unit for each function, indicating phase along with the location of poles and zeroes, a number of regularities can be noted: The inverse of each function is opposite the diagonal, and has the same size unit cell, with poles and zeroes exchanged. The pole and zero arrangement in the auxiliary rectangle formed by (0,0), (K,0), (0,K′) and (K,K′) are in accordance with the description of the pole and zero placement described in the introduction above. Also, the size of the white ovals indicating poles are a rough measure of the absolute value of the residue for that pole. The residues of the poles closest to the origin in the figure (i.e. in the auxiliary rectangle) are listed in the following table:

Residues of Jacobi Elliptic Functions
q
c s n d
p
c 1    
s      
n   1  
d -1 1  

When applicable, poles displaced above by 2K or displaced to the right by 2K′ have the same value but with signs reversed, while those diagonally opposite have the same value. Note that poles and zeroes on the left and lower edges are considered part of the unit cell, while those on the upper and right edges are not.

The information about poles can in fact be used to characterize the Jacobi elliptic functions:[14]

The function   is the unique elliptic function having simple poles at   (with  ) with residues   taking the value   at  .

The function   is the unique elliptic function having simple poles at   (with  ) with residues   taking the value   at  .

The function   is the unique elliptic function having simple poles at   (with  ) with residues   taking the value   at  .

Special values

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Setting   gives the lemniscate elliptic functions   and  :

 

When   or  , the Jacobi elliptic functions are reduced to non-elliptic functions:

Function m = 0 m = 1
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

For the Jacobi amplitude,   and   where   is the Gudermannian function.

In general if neither of p,q is d then  .

Identities

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Half angle formula

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K formulas

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Half K formula

 

 

 

Third K formula

 

To get x3, we take the tangent of twice the arctangent of the modulus.

Also this equation leads to the sn-value of the third of K:

 
 

These equations lead to the other values of the Jacobi-Functions:

 
 

Fifth K formula

Following equation has following solution:

 
 

To get the sn-values, we put the solution x into following expressions:

 
 

Relations between squares of the functions

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Relations between squares of the functions can be derived from two basic relationships (Arguments (u,m) suppressed):     where m + m' = 1. Multiplying by any function of the form nq yields more general equations:

   

With q = d, these correspond trigonometrically to the equations for the unit circle ( ) and the unit ellipse ( ), with x = cd, y = sd and r = nd. Using the multiplication rule, other relationships may be derived. For example:

 

 

 

 

Addition theorems

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The functions satisfy the two square relations (dependence on m suppressed)  

 

From this we see that (cn, sn, dn) parametrizes an elliptic curve which is the intersection of the two quadrics defined by the above two equations. We now may define a group law for points on this curve by the addition formulas for the Jacobi functions[3]

 

The Jacobi epsilon and zn functions satisfy a quasi-addition theorem:  

Double angle formulae can be easily derived from the above equations by setting x = y.[3] Half angle formulae[11][3] are all of the form:

 

where:        

Jacobi elliptic functions as solutions of nonlinear ordinary differential equations

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Derivatives with respect to the first variable

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The derivatives of the three basic Jacobi elliptic functions (with respect to the first variable, with   fixed) are:      

These can be used to derive the derivatives of all other functions as shown in the table below (arguments (u,m) suppressed):

Derivatives  
q
c s n d
p
c 0 −ds ns −dn sn −m' nd sd
s dc nc 0 cn dn cd nd
n dc sc −cs ds 0 m cd sd
d m' nc sc −cs ns m cn sn 0

Also

 

With the addition theorems above and for a given m with 0 < m < 1 the major functions are therefore solutions to the following nonlinear ordinary differential equations:

  •   solves the differential equations   and
  (for   not on a branch cut)
  •   solves the differential equations   and  
  •   solves the differential equations   and  
  •   solves the differential equations   and  

The function which exactly solves the pendulum differential equation,

 

with initial angle   and zero initial angular velocity is

 

where  ,   and  .

Derivatives with respect to the second variable

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With the first argument   fixed, the derivatives with respect to the second variable   are as follows:

 

Expansion in terms of the nome

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Let the nome be  ,  ,   and let  . Then the functions have expansions as Lambert series

 
 
 
 
 

when  

Bivariate power series expansions have been published by Schett.[15]

Fast computation

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The theta function ratios provide an efficient way of computing the Jacobi elliptic functions. There is an alternative method, based on the arithmetic-geometric mean and Landen's transformations:[6]

Initialize

 

where  . Define

 

where  . Then define

 

for   and a fixed  . If

 

for  , then

 

as  . This is notable for its rapid convergence. It is then trivial to compute all Jacobi elliptic functions from the Jacobi amplitude   on the real line.[note 2]

In conjunction with the addition theorems for elliptic functions (which hold for complex numbers in general) and the Jacobi transformations, the method of computation described above can be used to compute all Jacobi elliptic functions in the whole complex plane.

Another method of fast computation of the Jacobi elliptic functions via the arithmetic–geometric mean, avoiding the computation of the Jacobi amplitude, is due to Herbert E. Salzer:[16]

Let

 
 

Set

 

Then

 

as  .

Yet, another method for a rapidly converging fast computation of the Jacobi elliptic sine function found in the literature is shown below.[17]

Let:

 

Then set:

 

Then:

 .

Approximation in terms of hyperbolic functions

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The Jacobi elliptic functions can be expanded in terms of the hyperbolic functions. When   is close to unity, such that   and higher powers of   can be neglected, we have:[18][19]

  • sn(u):  
  • cn(u):  
  • dn(u):  

For the Jacobi amplitude,  

Continued fractions

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Assuming real numbers   with   and the nome  ,   with elliptic modulus  . If  , where   is the complete elliptic integral of the first kind, then holds the following continued fraction expansion[20]

 

Known continued fractions involving   and   with elliptic modulus   are

For  ,  :[21] pg. 374

 

For  ,  :[21] pg. 375

 

For  ,  :[22] pg. 220

 

For  ,  :[21] pg. 374

 

For  ,  :[21] pg. 375

 

Inverse functions

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The inverses of the Jacobi elliptic functions can be defined similarly to the inverse trigonometric functions; if  ,  . They can be represented as elliptic integrals,[23][24][25] and power series representations have been found.[26][3]

  •  
  •  
  •  

Map projection

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The Peirce quincuncial projection is a map projection based on Jacobian elliptic functions.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ If   and   is restricted to  , then   can be also written as  
  2. ^ For the   function,   can be used.

Citations

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  1. ^ Armitage, J. V.; Eberlein, W. F. (2006). Elliptic Functions (First ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-78078-0. p. 48
  2. ^ a b Walker, Peter (2003). "The Analyticity of Jacobian Functions with Respect to the Parameter k". Proceedings of the Royal Society. 459 (2038): 2569–2574. Bibcode:2003RSPSA.459.2569W. doi:10.1098/rspa.2003.1157. JSTOR 3560143. S2CID 121368966.
  3. ^ a b c d e Olver, F. W. J.; et al., eds. (2017-12-22). "NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions (Release 1.0.17)". National Institute of Standards and Technology. Retrieved 2018-02-26.
  4. ^ "cplot, Python package for plotting complex-valued functions". GitHub.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Neville, Eric Harold (1944). Jacobian Elliptic Functions. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  6. ^ a b Sala, Kenneth L. (November 1989). "Transformations of the Jacobian Amplitude Function and Its Calculation via the Arithmetic-Geometric Mean". SIAM Journal on Mathematical Analysis. 20 (6): 1514–1528. doi:10.1137/0520100.
  7. ^ Reinhardt, W. P.; Walker, P. L. (2010), "Jacobian Elliptic Functions", in Olver, Frank W. J.; Lozier, Daniel M.; Boisvert, Ronald F.; Clark, Charles W. (eds.), NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-19225-5, MR 2723248.
  8. ^ Carlson, B. C. (2010), "Elliptic Integrals", in Olver, Frank W. J.; Lozier, Daniel M.; Boisvert, Ronald F.; Clark, Charles W. (eds.), NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-19225-5, MR 2723248.
  9. ^ Whittaker, Edmund Taylor; Watson, George Neville (1927). A Course of Modern Analysis (4th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 492.
  10. ^ Cox, David Archibald (January 1984). "The Arithmetic-Geometric Mean of Gauss". L'Enseignement Mathématique. 30 (2): 290.
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