Personal tools
You are here: Home / Events / PhD Defence: Definite Sums of Hypergeometric Terms and Limits of P-Recursive Sequences

PhD Defence: Definite Sums of Hypergeometric Terms and Limits of P-Recursive Sequences

Filed under:
Hui Huang (Doctoral Program, Johannes Kepler University Linz), 15 February 2017, 10:15 a.m., S3 047
When Feb 15, 2017
from 10:15 AM to 11:45 AM
Where S3 047
Add event to calendar vCal
iCal

Definite Sums of Hypergeometric Terms and Limits of P-Recursive Sequences

The ubiquity of the class of D-finite functions and P-recursive sequences in symbolic computation is widely recognized. In this thesis, the presented work consists of two parts related to this class.

In the first part, we generalize the reduction-based creative telescoping algorithms to the hypergeometric setting, which allows to deal with definite sums of hypergeometric terms more quickly. We first modify the Abramov-Petkovsek reduction, and then design a new algorithm to compute minimal telescopers for bivariate hypergeometric terms based on the modified reduction. This new algorithm can avoid the costly computation of certificates, and outperforms the classical Zeilberger algorithm no matter whether certificates are computed or not according to the computational experiments. Moreover, we also derive order bounds for minimal telescopers. These bounds are sometimes better, and never worse than the known ones.

In the second part of the thesis, we study the class of D-finite numbers. It consists of the limits of convergent P-recursive sequences. Typically, this class contains many well-known mathematical constants in addition to the algebraic numbers. Our definition of the class of D-finite numbers depends on two subrings of the field of complex numbers. We investigate how different choices of these two subrings affect the class. Moreover, we show that D-finite numbers over the Gaussian rational field are essentially the same as the values of D-finite functions at non-singular algebraic number arguments (so-called the regular holonomic constants). This result makes it easier to recognize certain numbers as belonging to this class.