13.5 The Hermite equation 381
The integrand is an even function of xin the interval− 11 ≤ 1 x 1 ≤ 11. Therefore
(Section 5.3, equation (5.25))
(ii)P
2
2
(x) 1 = 1 3(1 1 − 1 x
2
), P
3
2
(x) 1 = 115 x(1 1 − 1 x
2
)
The integrand is an odd function of xin the interval − 11 ≤ 1 x 1 ≤ 11 , and I 1 = 10
(Section 5.3, equation (5.26))
0 Exercise 20
13.5 The Hermite equation
The Hermite equation is
y′′ 1 − 12 xy′ 1 + 12 ny 1 = 10 (13.30)
where nis a real number. The equation arises in the solution of the Schrödinger
equation for the harmonic oscillator. It is solved by the power-series method to give a
general solution
y(x) 1 = 1 a
0
y
1
(x) 1 + 1 a
1
y
2
(x)
in which the particular solutiony
1
contains only even powers of xandy
2
only odd
powers of x. As in the case of the Legendre equation,y
1
reduces to a polynomial of
degree nwhen (positive) nis an even integer, and similarly fory
2
when nis an odd
integer. These polynomials are called Hermite polynomialsH
n
(x), and they are those
solutions of the Hermite equation that are of interest in the physical sciences:
(13.31)
forn 1 = 1 0, 1, 2, 3, =The first few of these polynomials are
H
0
(x) 1 = 11 H
1
(x) 1 = 12 x
H
2
(x) 1 = 14 x
2
1 − 12 H
3
(x) 1 = 18 x
3
1 − 112 x (13.32)
Hx x
nn
x
nn n n
n
nn
() ( )
()
()
()( )(
=−
−
!
−− −
−
2
1
1
2
123
2
))
()
2
2
4
!
−
−
x
n
IPxPxdx xxdx==−
−
+
−
+
ZZ
1
1
2
2
3
2
1
1
22
() () 45 ( ) 1
=−+ −
32 0=
53
0
1
xxx
I=− −=−+−xxdx xxdx
++
31 51 3 561
0
1
22
0
1
42