jostpuur
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For x\in\mathbb{R} we can set
<br /> \textrm{Ai}(x) = \frac{1}{2\pi} \int\limits_{-\infty}^{\infty} e^{i\big(\frac{t^3}{3} + tx\big)}dt<br />
If we substitute in place of x a complex parameter z with \textrm{Im}(z)>0, the integral will converge on [0,\infty[, but diverge on ]-\infty,0]. With \textrm{Im}(z)<0 the integral will converge on ]-\infty,0], but diverge on [0,\infty[. The Wikipedia page tells me that a complex analytic version of the Airy function exists, but apparently it cannot be defined simply by substituting a complex variable z into the same integral formula that works for real variables x. How is the analytic continuation of Airy function studied then?
<br /> \textrm{Ai}(x) = \frac{1}{2\pi} \int\limits_{-\infty}^{\infty} e^{i\big(\frac{t^3}{3} + tx\big)}dt<br />
If we substitute in place of x a complex parameter z with \textrm{Im}(z)>0, the integral will converge on [0,\infty[, but diverge on ]-\infty,0]. With \textrm{Im}(z)<0 the integral will converge on ]-\infty,0], but diverge on [0,\infty[. The Wikipedia page tells me that a complex analytic version of the Airy function exists, but apparently it cannot be defined simply by substituting a complex variable z into the same integral formula that works for real variables x. How is the analytic continuation of Airy function studied then?