https://github.com/cran/nacopula
Revision 5bc804b03d066ef4a2ab9cf3af6f4f2df5bcda4e authored by Martin Maechler on 23 September 2011, 00:00:00 UTC, committed by Gabor Csardi on 23 September 2011, 00:00:00 UTC
1 parent f64e14b
Tip revision: 5bc804b03d066ef4a2ab9cf3af6f4f2df5bcda4e authored by Martin Maechler on 23 September 2011, 00:00:00 UTC
version 0.7-9-1
version 0.7-9-1
Tip revision: 5bc804b
polylog.Rd
\name{polylog}
\alias{polylog}
\title{Polylogarithm Li_s(z)}
\description{
Compute the polylogarithm function \eqn{Li_s(z)},
initially defined as the power series,
\deqn{\mathrm{Li}_s(z) = \sum_{k=1}^\infty {z^k \over k^s},}{%
Li_s(z) = sum(k=1..Inf; z^k / k^s),}
for \eqn{|z| < 1}, and then more generally (by analytic continuation) as
\deqn{\mathrm{Li}_1(z) = -\log(1-z),}{Li_1(z) = -log(1-z),}
and
\deqn{\mathrm{Li}_{s+1}(z) = \int_0^z \frac{\mathrm{Li}_s(t)}{t}\,dt.}{%
Li_{s+1}(z) = Int[0..z] (Li_s(t) / t) dt.}
Currently only the case of negative integer \eqn{s} is well supported,
as that is used for some of the Archimedean copula densities.
}
\usage{
polylog(z, s,
method = c("sum", "negI-s-Stirling",
"negI-s-Eulerian", "negI-s-asymp-w"),
logarithm = FALSE, is.log.z = FALSE, is.logmlog = FALSE,
asymp.w.order = 0, n.sum)
}
\arguments{
\item{z}{numeric or complex vector}
\item{s}{complex number; current implementation is aimed at
\eqn{s \in \{0,-1,\dots\}}{s in (0,-1,...)}}
\item{method}{a string specifying the algorithm to be used.}
\item{logarithm}{logical specified to return log(Li.(.)) instead of Li.(.)}
\item{is.log.z}{logical; if TRUE, the specified \code{z} argument is
really \eqn{w = \log(z)}{w = log(z)};
that is, we compute \eqn{Li_s(\exp(w))}{Li_s(exp(w))}, and we typically have
\eqn{w < 0}, or equivalently, \eqn{z < 1}.}
\item{is.logmlog}{logical; if TRUE, the specified argument \code{z} is
\eqn{lw = \log(-w) = \log(-\log(z))}{lw = log(-w) = log(-log(z))}
(where as above, \eqn{w = \log(z)}{w = log(z)}).}
\item{asymp.w.order}{currently only default is implemented.}
\item{n.sum}{for \code{method="sum"} only: the number of terms used.}
}
\details{
Almost entirely taken from
\url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polylogarithm}:
For integer values of the polylogarithm order, the following
explicit expressions are obtained by repeated application of
\eqn{z \frac{\partial}{\partial z}}{z * d/dz} to \eqn{Li_1(z)}:
%---
\deqn{
\mathrm{Li}_{1}(z) = -\log(1-z), \ \
\mathrm{Li}_{0}(z) = {z \over 1-z}, \ \
\mathrm{Li}_{-1}(z) = {z \over (1-z)^2}, \ \
\mathrm{Li}_{-2}(z) = {z \,(1+z) \over (1-z)^3},
}{%
Li_1(z) = -log(1-z),
Li_0(z) = z / (1-z),
Li_{-1}(z) = z / (1-z)^2,
Li_{-2}(z) = z (1+z) / (1-z)^3,
}
\eqn{\mathrm{Li}_{-3}(z) = {z \,(1+4z+z^2) \over (1-z)^4}}{%
Li_{-3}(z) = z (1+4z+z^2) / (1-z)^4}, etc.
Accordingly, the polylogarithm reduces to a ratio of polynomials in
z, and is therefore a rational function of z, for all nonpositive
integer orders. The general case may be expressed as a finite sum:
%---
\deqn{\mathrm{Li}_{-n}(z) =
\left(z \,{\partial \over \partial z} \right)^n \frac{z}{1-z} =
= \sum_{k=0}^n k! \,S(n+1,k+1) \left({z \over {1-z}} \right)^{k+1}
\ \ (n=0,1,2,\ldots),}{%
Li_{-n}(z) = ( z d/dz )^n z/(1-z) =
= sum(k=0..n ; k! S(n+1,k+1) (z /(1-z))^(k+1)), (n=0,1,2,...),}
where \eqn{S(n,k)} are the Stirling numbers of the second kind.
Equivalent formulae applicable to negative integer orders are
(Wood 1992, ยง 6) ...
\deqn{\mathrm{Li}_{-n}(z) = {1 \over (1-z)^{n+1}} \sum_{k=0}^{n-1}
\left\langle {n \atop k} \right\rangle z^{n-k} =
\frac{z \sum_{k=0}^{n-1} \left\langle {n \atop k} \right\rangle z^k}{(1-z)^{n+1}},
\qquad (n=1,2,3,\ldots) ~, }{%
Li_{-n}(z) = 1/((1-z)^(n+1)) sum(k=0..(n-1); < n \ k > z^(n-k)) =
= (z \sum_{k=0}^{n-1} < n \ k > z^k) / ((1-z)^(n+1)), (n=1,2,3,..),}
where \eqn{\left\langle {n \atop k} \right\rangle}{< n \ k >} are the
Eulerian numbers; see also \code{\link{Eulerian}}.
% All roots of Li_{-n}(z) are distinct and real; they include z = 0.
% Duplication formula: 2^{1-s} Li_s(z^2) = Li_s(z) + Li_s(-z).
}
\value{
numeric/complex vector as \code{z}.
}
\author{Martin Maechler}
\references{
Wikipedia (2011) \emph{Polylogarithm},
\url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polylogarithm}.
Wood, D.C. (June 1992).
The Computation of Polylogarithms. Technical Report 15-92.
Canterbury, UK: University of Kent Computing Laboratory.
\url{http://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/pubs/1992/110}.% Retrieved 2005-11-01.
Apostol, T.M. (2010), \emph{"Polylogarithm"}, in the
NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions, \url{http://dlmf.nist.gov/25.12}
Lewin, L. (1981).
\emph{Polylogarithms and Associated Functions}.
New York: North-Holland. ISBN 0-444-00550-1.
}
\seealso{
is used in MLE for some Archimedean copulas; see \code{\link{emle}}.
}
\examples{
polylog(z = 1, s = 2, n.sum = 1e5)
## in the limit, should be equal
pi^2 / 6
z1 <- c(0.95, 0.99, 0.995, 0.999, 0.9999)
L <- polylog( z1, s=-3,method="negI-s-Euler") # close to Inf
LL <- polylog( log(z1), s=-3,method="negI-s-Euler",is.log.z=TRUE)
LLL <- polylog(log(-log(z1)),s=-3,method="negI-s-Euler",is.logmlog=TRUE)
all.equal(L, LL)
all.equal(L, LLL)
p.Li <- function(s.set, from = -2.6, to = 1/4, ylim = c(-1, 0.5),
colors = c("orange","brown", palette()), n = 201, ...)
{
s.set <- sort(s.set, decreasing = TRUE)
s <- s.set[1] # <_ for auto-ylab
curve(polylog(x, s, method="negI-s-Stirling"), from, to,
col=colors[1], ylim=ylim, n=n, ...)
abline(h=0,v=0, col="gray")
for(is in seq_along(s.set)[-1])
curve(polylog(x, s=s.set[is], method="negI-s-Stirling"),
add=TRUE, col = colors[is], n=n)
s <- rev(s.set)
legend("bottomright",paste("s =",s), col=colors[2-s], lty=1, bty="n")
}
## yellow is unbearable (on white):
palette(local({p <- palette(); p[p=="yellow"] <- "goldenrod"; p}))
## Wikipedia page plot (+/-):
p.Li(1:-3, ylim= c(-.8, 0.6), colors = c(2:4,6:7))
## and a bit more:
p.Li(1:-5)
## For the range we need it:
ccol <- c(NA,NA, rep(palette(),10))
p.Li(-1:-20, from=0, to=.99, colors=ccol, ylim = c(0, 10))
## log-y scale:
p.Li(-1:-20, from=0, to=.99, colors=ccol, ylim = c(.01, 1e7),
log = "y", yaxt = "n")
if(require("sfsmisc")) eaxis(2) else axis(2)
}
\keyword{arithmetic}
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