Fox–Wright function
In mathematics, the Fox–Wright function (also known as Fox–Wright Psi function, not to be confused with Wright Omega function) is a generalisation of the generalised hypergeometric function pFq(z) based on ideas of Charles Fox (1928) and E. Maitland Wright (1935):
Upon changing the normalisation
it becomes pFq(z) for A1...p = B1...q = 1.
The Fox–Wright function is a special case of the Fox H-function (Srivastava & Manocha 1984, p. 50):
A special case of Fox–Wright function appears as a part of the normalizing constant of the modified half-normal distribution with the pdf on is given as , where denotes the Fox–Wright Psi function.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.