Content deleted Content added
ce |
48663320 |
||
Line 2:
{{Distinguish|Inverse-gamma distribution|Reciprocal gamma function}}
{{Orphan|date=July 2023}}
In [[mathematics]], the '''inverse gamma function''' <math>\Gamma^{-1}(x)</math> is the [[inverse function]] of the [[gamma function]]. In other words, it is the function satisfying <math display="inline">\Gamma(y)=x</math>. For example, <math>\Gamma^{-1}(24)=5</math> <ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Borwein |first1= Jonathan M. |last2=Corless |first2= Robert M.|title=Gamma and Factorial in the Monthly |journal=The American Mathematical Monthly |year=2017 |arxiv=1703.05349 |jstor=48663320}}</ref>. Usually, the inverse gamma function refers to the principal branch on the interval <math>\left(\Gamma(\alpha)= 0.8856031..., \infty\right)</math> where <math>\alpha=1.4616321...</math> is the unique positive number such that <math>\psi(\alpha)=0</math> <ref>{{cite journal |last1=Uchiyama |first1=Mitsuru |title=The principal inverse of the gamma function |date=April 2012 |url= https://www.jstor.org/stable/41505586 |journal=Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society|volume=140 |issue=4 |pages=1347 |doi= 10.1090/S0002-9939-2011-11023-2
|jstor=41505586 |s2cid=85549521 |access-date=20 March 2023}}</ref> (where <math>\psi(x)</math> is the [[digamma function]]).
|