In mathematics, the Sinhc function appears frequently in papers about optical scattering,[1] Heisenberg Spacetime[2] and hyperbolic geometry.[3] It is defined as[4][5]
It is a solution of the following differential equation:



- Imaginary part in complex plane
- Real part in complex plane
- absolute magnitude
- First-order derivative
- Real part of derivative
- Imaginary part of derivative
- absolute value of derivative
In terms of other special functions
Series expansion
Padé approximation
Gallery
See also
References
- ^ PN Den Outer, TM Nieuwenhuizen, A Lagendijk, Location of objects in multiple-scattering media, JOSA A, Vol. 10, Issue 6, pp. 1209–1218 (1993)
- ^ T Körpinar, New characterizations for minimizing energy of biharmonic particles in Heisenberg spacetime - International Journal of Theoretical Physics, 2014 - Springer
- ^ Nilg¨un S¨onmez, A Trigonometric Proof of the Euler Theorem in Hyperbolic Geometry, International Mathematical Forum, 4, 2009, no. 38, 1877–1881
- ^ JHM ten Thije Boonkkamp, J van Dijk, L Liu, Extension of the complete flux scheme to systems of conservation laws, J Sci Comput (2012) 53:552–568, DOI 10.1007/s10915-012-9588-5
- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Sinhc Function." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/SinhcFunction.html