Ramanujan developed his theory of modular equations using the theory of theta functions independently of Jacobi. A complete understanding of his approach is unfortunately not possible till now because he did not publish something like Fundamenta Nova containing detailed explanations of his approach. What we have today is his Notebooks edited by Bruce C. Berndt and his Collected Papers. His Notebooks are just statements of various mathematical formulas without any proof. A large part of these notebooks is concerned with modular equations and modern authors have not been able to discern his methods fully. Hence I will not be able to present a true picture of his approach. Rather I will try to present whatever I understand from his Collected Papers and his Notebooks and only focus on the elementary aspects.
Elementary Approach to Modular Equations: Ramanujan's Theory 1
By
Paramanand Singh
Monday, November 7, 2011
Elementary Approach to Modular Equations: Jacobi's Transformation Theory 5
Jacobi's Second Real Transformation
The second transformation is obtained by taking $ m = 0, m' = 1$ so that $ \omega = iK'/p$. On the face of it the transformation thus involves imaginary quantities, but will be shown later to be a real transformation only. In the case of this transformation we will use $ l_{1}$ in place of $ l$ and $ M_{1}$ in place of $ M$. Also we will keep the factor $ (-1)^{(p - 1)/2}$ with the multiplier $ M_{1}$. We thus obtain the following by putting $ \omega = iK'/p$ in the general formulas in $ 2s\omega$: \begin{align}\text{sn}\left(\frac{u}{M_{1}}, l_{1}\right) &= \frac{\text{sn}\,u}{M_{1}}\prod_{s = 1}^{(p - 1)/2}\dfrac{1 - \dfrac{\text{sn}^{2}\,u}{\text{sn}^{2}\,\dfrac{2siK'}{p}}}{1 - k^{2}\,\text{sn}^{2}\,u\,\text{sn}^{2}\,\dfrac{2siK'}{p}}\notag\\ &= \sqrt{\frac{k^{p}}{l_{1}}}\prod_{s = -(p - 1)/2}^{(p - 1)/2}\text{sn}\left(u + \frac{2siK'}{p}\right)\notag\\ \text{cn}\left(\frac{u}{M_{1}}, l_{1}\right) &= \text{cn}\,u\prod_{s = 1}^{(p - 1)/2}\dfrac{1 - \dfrac{\text{sn}^{2}\,u}{\text{sn}^{2}\left(K - \dfrac{2siK'}{p}\right)}}{1 - k^{2}\,\text{sn}^{2}\,u\,\text{sn}^{2}\,\dfrac{2siK'}{p}}\notag\\ &= \sqrt{\frac{l'_{1}k^{p}}{l_{1}k'^{p}}}\prod_{s = -(p - 1)/2}^{(p - 1)/2}\text{cn}\left(u + \frac{2siK'}{p}\right)\notag\\ \text{dn}\left(\frac{u}{M_{1}}, l_{1}\right) &= \text{dn}\,u\prod_{s = 1}^{(p - 1)/2}\dfrac{1 - k^{2}\,\text{sn}^{2}\,u\,\text{sn}^{2}\left(K - \dfrac{2siK'}{p}\right)}{1 - k^{2}\,\text{sn}^{2}\,u\,\text{sn}^{2}\,\dfrac{2siK'}{p}}\notag\\ &= \sqrt{\frac{l'_{1}}{k'^{p}}}\prod_{s = -(p - 1)/2}^{(p - 1)/2}\text{dn}\left(u + \frac{2siK'}{p}\right)\notag\\ M_{1} &= (-1)^{(p - 1)/2}\prod_{s = 1}^{(p - 1)/2}\left(\dfrac{\text{sn}\left(K - \dfrac{2siK'}{p}\right)}{\text{sn}\,\dfrac{2siK'}{p}}\right)^{2}\notag\\ l_{1} &= k^{p}\prod_{s = 1}^{(p - 1)/2}\text{sn}^{4}\left(K - \frac{2siK'}{p}\right)\notag\\ l'_{1} &= \dfrac{k'^{p}}{{\displaystyle\prod_{s = 1}^{(p - 1)/2}\text{dn}^{4}\,\frac{2siK'}{p}}}\notag\end{align}
By
Paramanand Singh
Thursday, November 3, 2011
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