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Eric Kvaalen (talk | contribs) The 3D graph doesn't correstpond to the real function between 0 and 1. The series should not take the absolute value of u in the meromorphic case. |
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{{Short description|Special function defined by an integral}}
{{Redirect|Li(x)|the polylogarithm denoted by Li<sub>''s''</sub>(''z'')|Polylogarithm}}
{{Use American English|date = January 2019}}
[[File:Plot of the logarithmic integral function li(z) in the complex plane from -2-2i to 2+2i with colors created with Mathematica 13.1 function ComplexPlot3D.svg|alt=Plot of the logarithmic integral function li(z) in the complex plane from -2-2i to 2+2i with colors created with Mathematica 13.1 function ComplexPlot3D|thumb|Plot of the absolute value of the logarithmic integral function li(z) in the complex plane from -2-2i to 2+2i with colors showing the argument (the angle around the complex plane)]]
In [[mathematics]], the '''logarithmic integral function''' or '''integral logarithm''' li(''x'') is a [[special function]]. It is relevant in problems of [[physics]] and has [[number theory|number theoretic]] significance. In particular, according to the [[prime number theorem]], it is a very good [[approximation]] to the [[prime-counting function]], which is defined as the number of [[prime numbers]] less than or equal to a given value {{mvar|x}}. [[Image:Logarithmic integral function.svg|thumb|right|300px|Logarithmic integral function plot]]
== Integral representation ==
The logarithmic integral has an integral representation defined for all positive [[real number]]s {{mvar|x}} ≠ 1 by the [[integral|definite integral]]
: <math> \operatorname{li}(x) = \int_0^x \frac{dt}{\ln t}. </math>
Here, {{math|ln}} denotes the [[natural logarithm]]. The function {{math|1/(ln
: <math> \operatorname{li}(x) = \lim_{\varepsilon \to 0+} \left( \int_0^{1-\varepsilon} \frac{dt}{\ln t} + \int_{1+\varepsilon}^x \frac{dt}{\ln t} \right).</math>
However, the logarithmic integral can also be taken to be a [[meromorphic]] complex-valued function in the complex ___domain. In this case it is multi-valued with branch points at 0 and 1, and the values between 0 and 1 defined by the above integral are not compatible with the values beyond 1. The complex function is shown in the figure above. The values on the real axis beyond 1 are the same as defined above, but the values between 0 and 1 are offset by iπ so that the absolute value at 0 is π rather than zero. The complex function is also defined (but multi-valued) for numbers with negative real part, but on the negative real axis the values are not real.
== Offset logarithmic integral ==
The '''offset logarithmic integral''' or '''Eulerian logarithmic integral''' is defined as
: <math> \operatorname{Li}(x) = \int_2^x \frac{dt}{\ln t} = \operatorname{li}(x) - \operatorname{li}(2). </math>
As such, the integral representation has the advantage of avoiding the singularity in the ___domain of integration.
Equivalently,
: <math> \operatorname{li}(x) = \int_0^x \frac{dt}{\ln t} = \operatorname{Li}(x) + \operatorname{li}(2). </math>
== Special values ==
The function li(''x'') has a single positive zero; it occurs at ''x'' ≈ 1.45136 92348 83381 05028 39684 85892 02744 94930... {{OEIS2C|A070769}}; this number is known as the [[Ramanujan–Soldner constant]].
<math>\operatorname{li}(\text{Li}^{-1}(0)) = \text{li}(2)</math> ≈ 1.045163 780117 492784 844588 889194 613136 522615 578151... {{OEIS2C|A069284}}
This is <math>-(\Gamma(0,-\ln 2) + i\,\pi)</math> where <math>\Gamma(a,x)</math> is the [[incomplete gamma function]]. It must be understood as the [[Cauchy principal value]] of the function.
== Series representation ==
The function li(''x'') is related to the ''[[exponential integral]]'' Ei(''x'') via the equation
: <math>\operatorname{li}(x)=\hbox{Ei}(\ln x) ,</math>
: <math> \operatorname{li}(e^u) = \hbox{Ei}(u) =
\gamma + \ln |u| + \sum_{n=1}^\infty {u^{n}\over n \cdot n!}
\quad \text{ for } u \ne 0 \, , </math>
where ''γ'' ≈ 0.57721 56649 01532 ... {{OEIS2C|id=A001620}} is the [[Euler–Mascheroni constant]]. For the complex function the formula is
: <math> \operatorname{li}(e^u) = \hbox{Ei}(u) =
\gamma + \ln u + \sum_{n=1}^\infty {u^{n}\over n \cdot n!}
\quad \text{ for } u \ne 0 \, , </math>
(without taking the absolute value of u).
A more rapidly convergent series by [[Srinivasa Ramanujan|Ramanujan]] <ref>{{MathWorld | urlname=LogarithmicIntegral | title=Logarithmic Integral}}</ref> is
: <math>
\operatorname{li}(x) =
\gamma
+ \ln |\ln x|
+ \sqrt{x} \sum_{n=1}^\infty
\left( \frac{ (-1)^{n-1} (\ln x)^n} {n! \, 2^{n-1}}
\sum_{k=0}^{\lfloor (n-1)/2 \rfloor} \frac{1}{2k+1} \right).
</math>
<!-- cribbed from Mathworld, which cites
Berndt, B. C. Ramanujan's Notebooks, Part IV. New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 126–131, 1994.
-->
Again, for the meromorphic complex function the term <math>\ln|\ln u|</math> must be replaced by <math>\ln\ln u.</math>
== Asymptotic expansion ==
The asymptotic behavior both for <math>x\to\infty</math> and for <math>x\to 0^+</math> is
: <math> \operatorname{li}(x) = O \left( \frac{x }{\ln x} \right) . </math>
where <math>O</math> is the [[big O notation]]. The full [[asymptotic expansion]] is
: <math> \operatorname{li}(x) \sim \frac{x}{\ln x} \sum_{k=0}^\infty \frac{k!}{(\ln x)^k} </math>
or
: <math> \frac{\operatorname{li}(x)}{x/\ln x} \sim 1 + \frac{1}{\ln x} + \frac{2}{(\ln x)^2} + \frac{6}{(\ln x)^3} + \cdots. </math>
This gives the following more accurate asymptotic behaviour:
: <math> \operatorname{li}(x) - \frac{x}{ \ln x} = O \left( \frac{x}{(\ln x)^2} \right) . </math>
As an asymptotic expansion, this series is [[divergent series|not convergent]]: it is a reasonable approximation only if the series is truncated at a finite number of terms, and only large values of ''x'' are employed. This expansion follows directly from the asymptotic expansion for the [[exponential integral]].
This implies e.g. that we can bracket li as:
: <math> 1+\frac{1}{\ln x} < \operatorname{li}(x) \frac{\ln x}{x} < 1+\frac{1}{\ln x}+\frac{3}{(\ln x)^2} </math>
for all <math>\ln x \ge 11</math>.
== Number theoretic significance ==
The logarithmic integral is important in [[number theory]], appearing in estimates of the number of [[prime number]]s less than a given value. For example, the [[prime number theorem]] states that:
: <math>\pi(x)\sim\operatorname{li}(x)</math>
where <math>\pi(x)</math> denotes the number of primes smaller than or equal to <math>x</math>.
Assuming the [[Riemann hypothesis]], we get the even stronger:<ref>Abramowitz and Stegun, p. 230, 5.1.20</ref>
: <math>|\operatorname{li}(x)-\pi(x)| = O(\sqrt{x}\log x)</math>
In fact, the [[Riemann hypothesis]] is equivalent to the statement that:
: <math>|\operatorname{li}(x)-\pi(x)| = O(x^{1/2+a})</math> for any <math>a>0</math>.
For small <math>x</math>, <math>\operatorname{li}(x)>\pi(x)</math> but the difference changes sign an infinite number of times as <math>x</math> increases, and the [[Skewes's number|first time that this happens]] is somewhere between 10<sup>19</sup> and {{val|1.4|e=316}}.
== See also ==
* [[Jørgen Pedersen Gram]]
* [[Skewes' number]]
* [[List of integrals of logarithmic functions]]
== References ==
{{reflist}}
* {{AS ref|5|228}}
* {{dlmf|id=6|title=Exponential, Logarithmic, Sine, and Cosine Integrals|first=N. M. |last=Temme}}
{{Nonelementary Integral}}
{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Special hypergeometric functions]]
[[Category:Integrals]]
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