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  The best-known properties and formulas for Bessel functions
  
 
  Real values for real arguments
  
 For real values of parameter   and positive argument  , the values of all four Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   are real.  
 
  Simple values at zero
  
 The Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   have rather simple values for the argument  : 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Specific values for specialized parameters
  
 In the case of half‐integer   (ν=  ) all Bessel functions  ,  ,   and   can be expressed through sine, cosine, or exponential functions multiplied by rational and square root functions. Modulo simple factors, these are the so‐called spherical Bessel functions, for example: 
 
 
 The previous formulas are particular cases of the following, more general formulas: 
 
 
 
 
 It can be shown that for other values of the parameters  , the Bessel functions cannot be represented through elementary functions. But for values   equal to  , and  , all Bessel functions can be converted into other known special functions, the Airy functions and their derivatives, for example: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Analyticity
  
 All four Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   are defined for all complex values of the parameter   and variable  , and they are analytical functions of   and   over the whole complex  ‐ and  ‐planes.  
 
  Poles and essential singularities
  
 For fixed  , the functions  ,  ,  , and   have an essential singularity at  . At the same time, the point   is a branch point (except in the case of integer   for the two functions  ). 
For fixed integer  , the functions   and   are entire functions of  .  
  For fixed  , the functions  ,  ,  , and   are entire functions of   and have only one essential singular point at  . 
 
  Branch points and branch cuts
  
 For fixed noninteger  , the functions  ,  ,  , and   have two branch points:  ,  , and one straight line branch cut between them.
For fixed integer  , only the functions   and   have two branch points:  ,  , and one straight line branch cut between them.  
 For cases where the functions  ,  ,  , and   have branch cuts, the branch cuts are single‐valued functions on the  ‐plane cut along the interval  , where they are continuous from above: 
 
 
 
 
  These functions have discontinuities that are described by the following formulas: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Periodicity
  
 All Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   do not have periodicity. 
 
  Parity and symmetry
  
 All Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   have mirror symmetry (ignoring the interval (-∞, 0)): 
 
 
 The two Bessel functions of the first kind have special parity (either odd or even) in each variable: 
 
 
 The two Bessel functions of the second kind have special parity (either odd or even) only in their parameter: 
 
 
 
  Series representations
  
 The Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   have the following series expansions (which converge in the whole complex  ‐plane): 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 The last four formulas have restrictions that do not allow their right sides to become indeterminate expressions for integer  . 
In such cases, evaluation of the limit from the right sides leads to much more complicated representations, for example: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Interestingly, closed‐form expressions for the truncated version of the Taylor series at the origin can be expressed through the generalized hypergeometric function   and the Meijer G function, for example: 
 
 
 
 
  Asymptotic series expansions
  
 The asymptotic behavior of the Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   can be described by the following formulas (which show only the main terms): 
 
 
 
 
 The previous formulas are valid for any direction approaching the point   to infinity (z∞). In particular cases, when   or  , the second and fourth formulas can be simplified to the following forms: 
 
 
 
  Integral representations
  
 The Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   have simple integral representations through the cosine (or the hyperbolic cosine or exponential function) and power functions in the integrand: 
 
 
 
 
 
  Transformations
  
 The argument of the Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   sometimes can be simplified through formulas that remove square roots from the arguments. For the Bessel functions of the second kind   and   with integer index  , this operation is realized by special formulas that include logarithms: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 If the argument of a Bessel function includes an explicit minus sign, the following formulas produce Bessel functions without the minus sign argument: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 If the arguments of the Bessel functions include sums, the following formulas hold: 
 
 
 
 
 If arguments of the Bessel functions include products, the following formulas hold: 
 
 
 
 
 
  Identities
  
 The Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   satisfy the following recurrence identities: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 The last eight identities can be generalized to the following recurrence identities with jump length  : 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Simple representations of derivatives
  
 The derivatives of all the four Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   have rather simple and symmetrical representations that can be expressed through other Bessel functions with different indices: 
 
 
 
 
 But these derivatives can be represented in other forms, for example: 
 
 
 
 
 The symbolic  -order derivatives have more complicated representations through the regularized hypergeometric function   or generalized Meijer G function: 
 
 
 
 
 
  Differential equations
  
 The Bessel functions  ,  ,  , and   appeared as special solutions of two linear second-order differential equations (the so‐called Bessel equation): 
 
 
 where   and   are arbitrary constants.  
 
  Zeros
  
 When   is real, the functions   and   each have an infinite number of real zeros, all of which are simple with the possible exception of the zero  : 
 
 
 When  , the zeros of   are all real. If   and   is not an integer, the number of complex zeros of   is   ; if   is odd, two of these zeros lie on the imaginary axis.  
 If  , all zeros of   are real. 
 The function   has no zeros in the region   for any real  . 
 When   is real, the functions   and   each have an infinite number of real zeros, all of which are simple with the possible exception of the zero  : 
 
 
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