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Differintegral
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In fractional calculus, an area of mathematical analysis, the differintegral is a combined differentiation/integration operator. Applied to a function ƒ, the q-differintegral of f, here denoted by
is the fractional derivative (if q > 0) or fractional integral (if q < 0). If q = 0, then the q-th differintegral of a function is the function itself. In the context of fractional integration and differentiation, there are several definitions of the differintegral.
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Standard definitions
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The four most common forms are:
- The Riemann–Liouville differintegralThis is the simplest and easiest to use, and consequently it is the most often used. It is a generalization of the Cauchy formula for repeated integration to arbitrary order. Here, .
- The Grunwald–Letnikov differintegralThe Grunwald–Letnikov differintegral is a direct generalization of the definition of a derivative. It is more difficult to use than the Riemann–Liouville differintegral, but can sometimes be used to solve problems that the Riemann–Liouville cannot.
- The Weyl differintegral This is formally similar to the Riemann–Liouville differintegral, but applies to periodic functions, with integral zero over a period.
- The Caputo differintegralIn opposite to the Riemann-Liouville differintegral, Caputo derivative of a constant is equal to zero. Moreover, a form of the Laplace transform allows to simply evaluate the initial conditions by computing finite, integer-order derivatives at point .
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Definitions via transforms
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The definitions of fractional derivatives given by Liouville, Fourier, and Grunwald and Letnikov coincide.[1] They can be represented via Laplace, Fourier transforms or via Newton series expansion.
Recall the continuous Fourier transform, here denoted :
Using the continuous Fourier transform, in Fourier space, differentiation transforms into a multiplication:
So, which generalizes to
Under the bilateral Laplace transform, here denoted by and defined as , differentiation transforms into a multiplication
Generalizing to arbitrary order and solving for , one obtains
Representation via Newton series is the Newton interpolation over consecutive integer orders:
For fractional derivative definitions described in this section, the following identities hold:
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Basic formal properties
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- Linearity rules
- Zero rule
- Product rule
In general, composition (or semigroup) rule is a desirable property, but is hard to achieve mathematically and hence is not always completely satisfied by each proposed operator;[3] this forms part of the decision making process on which one to choose:
- (ideally)
- (in practice)
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See also
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