Abstract
This paper investigates the composition structures of certain fractional integral operators whose kernels are certain types of generalized hypergeometric functions. It is shown how composition formulas of these operators can be closely related to the various Erdélyi-type hypergeometric integrals. We also derive a derivative formula for the fractional integral operator and some applications of the operator are considered for a certain Volterra-type integral equation, which provide two generalizations to Khudozhnikov’s integral equation (see below). Some specific relationships, examples, and some future research problems are also discussed.
Keywords:
composition operators; Erdélyi-type integral; fractional integral operator; generalized hypergeometric function MSC:
26A33; 33C20
1. Introduction
In 1978, Saigo [] introduced his widely used fractional integral operators and (see Equations (16) and (17) below). Saigo’s operators involve the Gauss hypergeometric functions as kernels and possess many properties (see, for example, Refs. [,,,,]). Over the past few decades, Saigo’s operators have been applied in various branches of mathematics, especially in the Geometric Function Theory (see Refs. [,,]). The symmetry of parameters of various hypergeometric functions injects more choice and flexibility into the theory of Generalized Fractional Calculus.
A natural question that arises is: Can an operator involving a generalized hypergeometric function as kernel have such properties as Saigo’s operators? In this direction, some efforts have been made by some authors to find particular forms of operators. In 1987, Goyal and Jain [] introduced two fractional integral operators and , which involve the generalized hypergeometric functions as kernels. Later, Goyal et al. [,] introduced two more general fractional integral operators involving the generalized hypergeometric function and Srivastava’s polynomial .
Although very general in form, the properties of the operators and introduced by Goyal et al. are far less succinct than those of Saigo’s operators. For Saigo’s operators and , we have the following useful properties (see Refs. [,]):
and
Under certain conditions, we also have the following composition properties (see Ref. [], p. 140, Equations (2.22) and (2.23), see also Ref. []):
and
However, it seems rather difficult to find properties for the operators and similar to those given above by (1)–(6). Moreover, it is still unknown whether the corresponding generalized fractional derivatives of the forms (see Ref. [], Equations (3.2) and (3.4))
can be defined for the operators and .
Very recently, the authors [] introduced two fractional integral operators and (see below Equations (12) and (13)) whose kernels involve a very special class of generalized hypergeometric function. The authors have to some extent overcome the limitations of the operators and and obtained results similar to (1) and (2). Subsequently, some further results and applications related to and were discovered in the papers [,].
The aim of the present paper is to first establish for the operators and some results relating to the composition structures of the defined operators analogous to Formulas (3)–(7). We also consider defining the corresponding fractional derivative operators of these operators and . Finally, we shall consider some connections of our work with Khudozhnikov’s work [] on Volterra-type integral equations.
2. Preliminaries
In this paper, the symbols , , and denote the set of natural, positive real, and complex numbers, respectively. The Pochhammer symbol is defined by
In addition, we shall use the convention of writing the finite sequence of parameters by and the product of p Pochhammer symbols by , where an empty product is treated as unity.
We are particularly interested in the generalized hypergeometric function of the form
where . The conditions of convergence of (8) follow easily from the usual definition of the generalized hypergeometric function; see Ref. [], p. 62 and Ref. [], p. 30. Several recent results concerning this particular type of generalized hypergeometric function have been obtained in Ref. [] (see also Ref. []).
For convenience, we put
and let () be determined by the generating relation
Obviously, ’s depend only on (). Additionally, we define () by
where the notation denotes the Stirling number of the second kind.
Definition 1
([], p. 423, Definition 1.1). Let , and . Also, let and φ be a suitable complex-valued function defined on . Then the fractional integral of the first kind of a function φ is defined by
and the fractional integral of the second kind of a function is defined by
When , we obtain
and
Some properties of the operators (12) and (13) have been presented in Refs. [,]. Further, the operators and have the following special cases:
- (a)
- (b)
- (c)
The operators defined above by (12) and (13) were previously studied in Refs. [,] in the space (, ) of those complex-valued Lebesgue measurable functions on for which , where
It follows at once that . For convenience, we define
The following lemma gives some useful properties of the operators and relating to the norm defined in (20).
Lemma 1.
Let .
- (i)
- If and , then the operator is bounded from into , and
- (ii)
- If and , then the operator is bounded from into , and
- (iii)
- If and , then the operator is bounded from into , and
- (iv)
- If and , then the operator is bounded from into , and
- (v)
- If and , then the operator is bounded from into , and
- (vi)
- If and , then the operator is bounded from into , and
Proof.
The results (i) and (ii) are established in Ref. [], p. 437, Theorem 3.1.
On the other hand, the results (iii) and (iv) are the corollaries of (i) and (ii) (see also Ref. [], p. 614).
Finally, the results (v) and (vi) follow immediately from (iii) and (iv). These results are consistent with the classical ones. It may be noted that if we set in (v) and (vi), then the operator is bounded in provided that and , and the operator is bounded in provided that and (see Ref. [], p. 107, Lemma 2.28 and Ref. [], p. 323). □
It should be particularly emphasized here that the operators and are quite different from the multiple Erdélyi–Kober fractional integral operators (see Ref. [], p. 11, see also Refs. [,]), though some special cases of and when (e.g., Saigo’s operators) can be expressed as multiple Erdélyi–Kober fractional integral operators. The cases that are very special because Meijer’s G-function and have the following relationship (see [], p. 18, Equation (1.1.18))
for . However, there is no such relationship between and . A slightly more general case than (21) will lead us to the Marichev–Saigo–Maeda fractional integral operators (see Refs. [,]), which are also very different from our operators and . In addition, the operators and cannot be regarded as special cases of G-transform studied in Ref. []. Since the kernels of and are not of Sonine’s type, they cannot be included in the theory developed very recently by Luchko (see Ref. []).
3. The Main Results
3.1. Composition Formulas
Theorem 1.
Proof.
Denote the left-hand side of (24) by . Then by interchanging the order of integration, we obtain
where
We shall tackle Equation (24) and leave the verification of the validity of interchanging the order of integration in (25) at the end of the proof.
Letting in (26), we have
The right-hand side of (27) can be evaluated by using an Erdélyi-type integral established by Luo and Raina []. For and , Luo and Raina proved that (Ref. [], p. 482, Theorem 3.2)
where , and are given by (22) and are the nonvanishing zeros of the parametric polynomial defined in (23). We note that the parametric polynomial is independent of parameter , and thus we may replace by (without changing the values of , , and ) in (28) to get
where .
Now, we validate the interchanging of the integration. It is sufficient to show that
where
Note that (see Ref. [], p. 63, Theorem 2.1.3 and [], p. 387)
as , so for each s, we have
where is a positive number. In view of the definition of the Erdélyi–Kober operator (18), we have
where () and
From Lemma 1, we have , since and
For the generalized hypergeometric function , we have (see, for example Ref. [], p. 149)
as , where . Therefore, for each , we find that
where is a positive number, , and
Thus, Fubini’s theorem is applicable and the proof is complete. □
Remark 1.
Theorem 2.
Proof.
Denote the left-hand side of (35) by . Then, following a similar procedure as described in the proof of Theorem 1, we have
where
Letting
so that
we have
The use of Erdélyi-type integral (29) gives
and thus (36) becomes
where are the nonvanishing zeros of the parametric polynomial (23).
As in the proof of Theorem 1, we verify the validity of interchanging the order of integration by checking the finiteness of the integral
where
Then from (32) we have
This completes the proof. □
Remark 2.
Letting further in (37), we have
Additionally, by putting in (38) and then letting in the resulting equation we get the following clearer form
which is a special case of (5) when . It does not seem possible to deduce (5) by merely specializing the parameters in (35). Therefore, it should be interesting to find a composition formula from (35) which may include (5) or (6) as particular cases.
As depicted in Theorems 1 and 2, the study of the composition structure of the operators and rests heavily on the existence of a suitable Erdélyi-type integral, because we derive (24) and (35) from the Erdélyi-type integral (29). However, there may possibly be an alternative approach by which the Erdelyi-type integral may be obtained from a known composition structure [] (see also Refs. [,]). Such an approach may be of special interest since our operators involve the generalized hypergeometric function and the methodology may lead to some new results.
3.2. Derivative Formula
In this section we derive a derivative formula involving the fractional integral operator (12).
We introduce here some notations describing necessary concepts that would be used in the sequel. Let be the nonvanishing zeros of the parametric polynomial of degree m defined by
where the () are determined by the generating relation (10).
We define the parametric polynomial by
where are determined by the generating relation
Theorem 3.
Proof.
Using the Euler-type transformation due to Miller and Paris [], p. 305, Theorem 3
we have
where are the nonvanishing zeros of the parametric polynomial defined by (39). By making use of the Leibniz integral rule, we obtain
Next, differentiating n times, we obtain
Before proceeding further, we consider here a simple example.
Example 1.
Therefore, η can be expressed as
It follows from (41) that and , where ξ is the nonvanishing zero of the parametric polynomial
It may be observed that the Euler-type transformation (43) is used twice, so we need to be careful while finding special cases of Theorem 3.
- (i)
- By letting () in (42) and noting that -function in (42) reduces to 1, we getIn fact, letting changes the parametric polynomials and defined by (39) and (40), respectively. However, if the new polynomials, say and , also have nonvanishing zeros, denoted by and respectively, then (47) holds true. To illustrate here, let us set in Example 1, then becomes with its nonvanishing zero and becomes . The nonvanishing zero of isTherefore, we obtain from (46) thatWe also observe that the subsitution may always reduce the right-hand side of (42) to a Erdélyi–Kober type integral.
- (ii)
- Further, if , , , , and in (48), we then haveIn addition, in view of (16) and the relation
4. Relationship with Khudozhnikov’s Work
In a very short paper, Khudozhnikov [] considered in a certain class of integrable functions the following Volterra-type integral equation
where , and . By using some known formulas from Ref. [], Khudozhnikov obtained the following result [], p. 79, Equation (2).
Theorem 4
(Khudozhnikov). The Volterra-type integral Equation (49) can be reduced to the following system of differential and integral equations:
with initial conditions .
In Ref. [], Khudozhnikov briefly mentioned that the result can be generalized to those equations involving the generalized hypergeometric functions , and . However, he did not give possible forms of the generalizations or the formulas to be used. In fact, the most likely generalization requires use of a generalized Euler-type transformation, which is not included in Ref. []. Therefore, we think that the question of finding a generalization of Theorem 4 is still open.
In this section, we first propose a generalization of Theorem 4. We then consider a Volterra-type integral equation generated by the operator defined by (12) and obtain an analogue of Khudozhnikov’s theorem.
4.1. A Generalization of Khudozhnikov’s Theorem
Let us consider the Volterra-type integral equation
where , and . Obviously, (50) reduces to (49) when , and .
By using a lemma due to Miller and Paris [], p. 298, Lemma 4, and the classical Euler transformation [], p. 68, Equation (2.2.7), we can express the -function as a finite sum of -functions given by
Then (50) can be written as
Let
In view of the derivative Formula (44), we have
and therefore
and for . Now (52) can be expressed as
The above steps concerning the integral Equation (50) therefore yield the following theorem.
Theorem 5.
To show that Theorem 5 contains Khudozhnikov’s result as a special case, we only need to prove that
Our calculations require some basics on the theory of combinatorics.
When , and , we get
where is generated by
We need in fact to find an explicit expression for . By using the Chu–Vandermonde identity [], p. 70, we have
Recall that
where is the Stirling number of the first kind and the symbol is usually used to denote the unsigned Stirling number of the first kind (see Ref. [], p. 239). Substituting (57) into (56) and then interchanging the order of summation, we obtain
4.2. A Variant of Khudozhnikov’s Theorem
A comparison of the fractional integral operator with Equations (49) and (50) inspire us to consider the following integral equation
where and .
Using the Euler-type transformation (43), then Equation (61) can be converted into
where are nonvanishing zeros of the parametric polynomial of degree m given by (39).
By using the same lemma of Miller and Paris [], p. 298, Lemma 4 and the Euler transformation [], p. 68, Equation (2.2.7) or else using Equation (51), we can express (as in the proof of Theorem 5) the -function as a finite sum of -functions given by
where
and () are generated by (41). With the help of (63), the integral Equation (62) can then be written as
Finally, using the Leibniz integral rule and simplifying the resulting formula by the Pfaff transformation [], p. 68, Equation (2.2.6), we obtain
If
then the above details concerning the integral equation (61) may be put in the following theorem.
5. Conclusions
In this paper, some composition formulas of and defined by (12) and (13) are obtained by making use of a Erdélyi-type integral. We find a derivative formula, which in the future may enable us to define a new fractional derivative operator. Finally, we generalize Khudozhnikov’s work on Volterra-type integral equation and find its relationship with our operator .
Considering the obtained properties of the operators and , we briefly mention here some problems that deserve further study.
- (i)
- Since only two composition formulas for and are found in the present work, which is still a very small number compared to the number of the composition formulas of Saigo’s operators and , it may be worthwhile if additional composition structures can be discovered for the operators and . The exploration in this direction may also lead us to new discoveries related to the Erdélyi-type integrals;
- (ii)
- The present work together with our previous papers [,] have established many fundamental properties of and . For further possible work, some new properties and problems may be worthy of attention in view of the classical books [,] on the subject and some recent review articles contained, for example, in Ref. []. In particular, it may be worthwhile to first focus on the problem of finding a reasonable analogue of the well known limit case formula, viz. concerning the Riemann–Liouville fractional integral operator (see Ref. [], p. 51, Theorem 2.7).
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, M.-J.L. and R.K.R.; methodology, M.-J.L. and R.K.R.; writing—original draft preparation, M.-J.L. and R.K.R.; writing—review and editing, M.-J.L. and R.K.R.; funding acquisition, M.-J.L. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
The research of the first author is supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 12001095).
Institutional Review Board Statement
Not applicable.
Informed Consent Statement
Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement
Not applicable.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the referees for their comments and suggestions.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results.
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