Laguerre-Gauss quadrature, also called Gauss-Laguerre quadrature or Laguerre quadrature, is a Gaussian quadrature over the interval
with weighting function
(Abramowitz and Stegun 1972, p. 890). It fits
all polynomials of degree
exactly (Chandrasekhar 1960, p. 61).
The abscissas for quadrature order are given by the roots of the Laguerre polynomials
. The weights are
(1)
| |||
(2)
|
where
is the coefficient of
in
. For Laguerre polynomials,
(3)
|
where
is a factorial, so
(4)
| |||
(5)
|
Additionally,
(6)
|
so
(7)
| |||
(8)
|
Using the recurrence relation
(9)
| |||
(10)
|
which, since
is a root of
,
gives
(11)
|
so (10) becomes
(12)
|
gives
(13)
| |||
(14)
|
The error term is
(15)
|
(Abramowitz and Stegun 1972, p. 890).
Beyer (1987) gives a table of abscissas and weights up to .
2 | 0.585786 | 0.853553 |
3.41421 | 0.146447 | |
3 | 0.415775 | 0.711093 |
2.29428 | 0.278518 | |
6.28995 | 0.0103893 | |
4 | 0.322548 | 0.603154 |
1.74576 | 0.357419 | |
4.53662 | 0.0388879 | |
9.39507 | 0.000539295 | |
5 | 0.26356 | 0.521756 |
1.4134 | 0.398667 | |
3.59643 | 0.0759424 | |
7.08581 | 0.00361176 | |
12.6408 | 0.00002337 |
The abscissas and weights can be computed analytically for small .
2 | ||
For the generalized Laguerre polynomial
with weighting function
,
(16)
|
is the coefficient of in
and
(17)
| |||
(18)
|
where
is the gamma function. The weights are then
(19)
| |||
(20)
|
and the error term is
(21)
|