A product involving an infinite number of terms. Such products can converge. In fact, for positive , the product
converges to
a nonzero number iff
converges.
Infinite products can be used to define the cosine
(1)
|
(2)
|
sine, and sinc function. They also appear in polygon circumscribing,
(3)
|
An interesting infinite product formula due to Euler which relates and the
th prime
is
(4)
| |||
(5)
|
(Blatner 1997). Knar's formula gives a functional equation for the gamma function in terms of the infinite product
(6)
|
A regularized product identity is given by
(7)
|
(Muñoz Garcia and Pérez-Marco 2003, 2008).
Mellin's formula states
(8)
|
where
is the digamma function and
is the gamma function.
The following class of products
(9)
| |||
(10)
| |||
(11)
| |||
(12)
| |||
(13)
|
(Borwein et al. 2004, pp. 4-6), where is the gamma function,
the first of which is given in Borwein and Corless (1999), can be done analytically.
In particular, for
,
(14)
|
where
(Borwein et al. 2004, pp. 6-7). It is not known if (13)
is algebraic, although it is known to satisfy no integer polynomial with degree less
than 21 and Euclidean norm less than
(Borwein et al. 2004, p. 7).
Products of the following form can be done analytically,
(15)
|
where ,
, and
are the roots of
(16)
| |||
(17)
| |||
(18)
|
respectively, can also be done analytically. Note that (17) and (18) were unknown to Borwein and Corless (1999). These are special cases of the result that
(19)
|
if
and
,
where
is the
th
root of
and
is the
th
root of
(P. Abbott, pers. comm., Mar. 30, 2006).
For ,
(20)
|
(D. W. Cantrell, pers. comm., Apr. 18, 2006). The first few explicit cases are
(21)
| |||
(22)
| |||
(23)
| |||
(24)
| |||
(25)
| |||
(26)
|
These are a special case of the general formula
(27)
|
(Prudnikov et al. 1986, p. 754).
Similarly, for ,
(28)
|
(D. W. Cantrell, pers. comm., Mar. 29, 2006). The first few explicit cases are
(29)
| |||
(30)
| |||
(31)
| |||
(32)
| |||
(33)
| |||
(34)
|
The d-analog expression
(35)
|
also has closed form expressions,
(36)
| |||
(37)
| |||
(38)
| |||
(39)
|
General expressions for infinite products of this type include
(40)
| |||
(41)
| |||
(42)
| |||
(43)
|
where
is the gamma function and
denotes the complex modulus
(Kahovec). (40) and (41) can also be rewritten
as
(44)
| |||
(45)
|
where
is the floor function,
is the ceiling function,
and
is the modulus of
(mod
)
(Kahovec).
Infinite products of the form
(46)
| |||
(47)
|
converge for ,
where
is a q-Pochhammer symbol and
is a Jacobi
theta function. Here, the
case is exactly the constant
encountered in the analysis of digital tree
searching.
Other products include
(48)
| |||||
(49)
| |||||
(50)
| |||||
(51)
|
(OEIS A086056 and A247559; Prudnikov et al. 1986, p. 757). Note that Prudnikov et al. (1986, p. 757) also incorrectly give the product
(52)
|
where
is a q-Pochhammer symbol, as
, which differs from the correct result
by
.
The following analogous classes of products can also be done analytically (J. Zúñiga, pers. comm., Nov. 9, 2004), where again is a Jacobi
theta function,
(53)
| |||
(54)
| |||
(55)
| |||
(56)
| |||
(57)
| |||
(58)
| |||
(59)
| |||
(60)
| |||
(61)
| |||
(62)
| |||
(63)
|
The first of these can be used to express the Fibonacci factorial constant in closed form.
A class of infinite products derived from the Barnes G-function is given by
(64)
|
where
is the Euler-Mascheroni constant. For
,
2, 3, and 4, the explicit products are given by
(65)
| |||
(66)
| |||
(67)
| |||
(68)
|
The interesting identities
(69)
|
(Ewell 1995, 2000), where is the exponent of the exact power of 2 dividing
,
is the odd part
of
,
is the divisor function of
, and
(70)
| |||
(71)
|
(OEIS A101127; Jacobi 1829; Ford et al. 1994; Ewell 1998, 2000), the latter of which is known as "aequatio identica satis abstrusa" in the string theory physics literature, arise is connection with the tau function.
An unexpected infinite product involving is given by
(72)
|
(Dobinski 1876, Agnew and Walker 1947).
A curious identity first noted by Gosper is given by
(73)
| |||
(74)
|
(OEIS A100072), where is the gamma function,
is the trigamma function, and
is the Glaisher-Kinkelin
constant.