P-adic gamma function Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-adic_gamma_function
In mathematics, the p-adic gamma function Γp is a function of a p-adic variable analogous to the gamma function. It was first explicitly defined by Morita (1975), though Boyarsky (1980) pointed out that Dwork (1964) implicitly used the same function. Diamond (1977) defined a p-adic analog Gp of log Γ. Overholtzer (1952) had previously given a definition of a different p-adic analogue of the gamma function, but his function does not have satisfactory properties and is not used much.
The p-adic gamma function is the unique continuous function of a p-adic integerx (with values in ) such that
for positive integersx, where the product is restricted to integers i not divisible by p. As the positive integers are dense with respect to the p-adic topology in , can be extended uniquely to the whole of . Here is the ring of p-adic integers. It follows from the definition that the values of are invertible in ; this is because these values are products of integers not divisible by p, and this property holds after the continuous extension to . Thus . Here is the set of invertible p-adic integers.
Other interesting special values come from the Gross–Koblitz formula, which was first proved by cohomological tools, and later was proved using more elementary methods.[2] For example,
where denotes the square root with first digit 3, and denotes the square root with first digit 2. (Such specifications must always be done if we talk about roots.)
Another example is
where is the square root of in congruent to 1 modulo 3.[3]
The Mahler expansion is similarly important for p-adic functions as the Taylor expansion in classical analysis. The Mahler expansion of the p-adic gamma function is the following:[1]: 374
where the sequence is defined by the following identity:
Morita, Yasuo (1975), "A p-adic analogue of the Γ-function", Journal of the Faculty of Science. University of Tokyo. Section IA. Mathematics, 22 (2): 255–266, hdl:2261/6494, ISSN0040-8980, MR0424762