Associated legendre polynomials fail after certain degree

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Hi,
I am using legendre polynomials for an application on spherical harmonics. However the code
legendre(170,0.5)
where 170 is the degree/order fail, giving me Inf or NaN. Is this considered a bug or is there way to aid the issue using higher precision somehow?
Best

Accepted Answer

David Goodmanson
David Goodmanson on 19 Dec 2017
Hi ailbeildce,
Try legendre(n,x,'norm') or legendre(n,x,'sch'). Each of these normalizes the associated legendre function slightly differently, and both leave out a factor in front that gets out of hand in a big way as m gets large [where m is the upper parameter in Pmn, 0<=m<=n, and m=0 corresponds to the usual Pn].
With either of those options, n can go up to at least 2400.
You can see what the factors are in 'doc legendre'. You will have to check, but I think the 'norm' option for Pmn gives you
Int{-1,1} Pmn(x)^2 dx = 1,
appropriate for spherical harmonics.
  3 Comments
David Goodmanson
David Goodmanson on 30 Mar 2018
You're very welcome. I should probably know, but what is a PM feature?
Elvis Alexander Agüero Vera
Edited: Elvis Alexander Agüero Vera on 16 Jan 2023
I guess he refers to a private mesage.
Somewhat related question: I also need to calculate with efficiency the derivatives of the legendre Polynomials. I would appreciate a fast way of computing that.
Also, why is it that
f = matlabFunction(diff(legendreP(50, x), x))
is so unstable for degrees greater than, say, 50?

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More Answers (1)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 16 Dec 2017
If you have the symbolic toolbox you can work with it
  2 Comments
ailbeildce
ailbeildce on 17 Dec 2017
Edited: ailbeildce on 17 Dec 2017
legendre() gives out more information than legendreP. Although I don't know if there's a way to generate Y_l^m where m!=0 with legendreP.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 17 Dec 2017
For integer m you can see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Associated_Legendre_polynomials#Definition_for_non-negative_integer_parameters_%E2%84%93_and_m which the formula given in terms of derivatives. As the different orders correspond to different numbers of derivatives of the Legendre polynomial, you can find the different orders in a loop.

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