Formal calculus and umbral calculus
From MaRDI portal
Publication:986697
zbMATH Open1226.05050arXiv0912.0961MaRDI QIDQ986697FDOQ986697
Authors: Thomas J. Robinson
Publication date: 12 August 2010
Published in: The Electronic Journal of Combinatorics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Abstract: In this paper we use the viewpoint of the formal calculus underlying vertex operator algebra theory to study certain aspects of the classical umbral calculus and we introduce and study certain operators generalizing the classical umbral shifts. We begin by calculating the exponential generating function of the higher derivatives of a composite function, following a short, elementary proof which naturally arose as a motivating computation related to a certain crucial "associativity" property of an important class of vertex operator algebras. Very similar (somewhat forgotten) proofs had appeared by the 19-th century, of course without any motivation related to vertex operator algebras. Using this formula, we derive certain results, including especially the calculation of certain adjoint operators, of the classical umbral calculus. This is, roughly speaking, a reversal of the logical development of some standard treatments, which have obtained formulas for the higher derivatives of a composite function, most notably Fa`a di Bruno's formula, as a consequence of umbral calculus. We set our results in the context of some standard material in what seems a natural fashion given our point of view. We also show a connection between the Virasoro algebra and the classical umbral shifts. This leads naturally to a more general class of operators, which we introduce, and which include the classical umbral shifts as a special case. We prove a few basic facts about these operators.
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0912.0961
File on IPFS (Hint: this is only the Hash - if you get a timeout, this file is not available on our server.)
Recommendations
Cited In (7)
- The largest singletons of set partitions
- Umbral calculus and Sheffer sequences of polynomials
- Apostol-Euler polynomials arising from umbral calculus
- Mellin transforms of generalized fractional integrals and derivatives
- Identities involving Laguerre polynomials derived from umbral calculus
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Sheffer sequences of polynomials and their applications
This page was built for publication: Formal calculus and umbral calculus
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q986697)