NAG CL Interface
s14bac (gamma_​incomplete)

1 Purpose

s14bac computes values for the incomplete gamma functions Pa,x and Qa,x.

2 Specification

#include <nag.h>
void  s14bac (double a, double x, double tol, double *p, double *q, NagError *fail)
The function may be called by the names: s14bac, nag_specfun_gamma_incomplete or nag_incomplete_gamma.

3 Description

s14bac evaluates the incomplete gamma functions in the normalized form
Pa,x = 1Γa 0x ta-1 e-t dt ,  
Qa,x = 1Γ a x ta- 1 e-t dt ,  
with x0 and a>0, to a user-specified accuracy. With this normalization, Pa,x+Qa,x=1.
Several methods are used to evaluate the functions depending on the arguments a and x, the methods including Taylor expansion for Pa,x, Legendre's continued fraction for Qa,x, and power series for Qa,x. When both a and x are large, and ax, the uniform asymptotic expansion of Temme (1987) is employed for greater efficiency – specifically, this expansion is used when a20 and 0.7ax1.4a.
Once either P or Q is computed, the other is obtained by subtraction from 1. In order to avoid loss of relative precision in this subtraction, the smaller of P and Q is computed first.
This function is derived from the function GAM in Gautschi (1979b).

4 References

Gautschi W (1979a) A computational procedure for incomplete gamma functions ACM Trans. Math. Software 5 466–481
Gautschi W (1979b) Algorithm 542: Incomplete gamma functions ACM Trans. Math. Software 5 482–489
Temme N M (1987) On the computation of the incomplete gamma functions for large values of the parameters Algorithms for Approximation (eds J C Mason and M G Cox) Oxford University Press

5 Arguments

1: a double Input
On entry: the argument a of the functions.
Constraint: a>0.0.
2: x double Input
On entry: the argument x of the functions.
Constraint: x0.0.
3: tol double Input
On entry: the relative accuracy required by you in the results. If s14bac is entered with tol greater than 1.0 or less than machine precision, then the value of machine precision is used instead.
4: p double * Output
5: q double * Output
On exit: the values of the functions Pa,x and Qa,x respectively.
6: fail NagError * Input/Output
The NAG error argument (see Section 7 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).

6 Error Indicators and Warnings

NE_ALG_NOT_CONV
Algorithm fails to terminate in value iterations.
NE_ALLOC_FAIL
Dynamic memory allocation failed.
See Section 3.1.2 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
NE_BAD_PARAM
On entry, argument value had an illegal value.
NE_INTERNAL_ERROR
An internal error has occurred in this function. Check the function call and any array sizes. If the call is correct then please contact NAG for assistance.
See Section 7.5 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
NE_NO_LICENCE
Your licence key may have expired or may not have been installed correctly.
See Section 8 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
NE_REAL_ARG_LE
On entry, a=value.
Constraint: a>0.0.
NE_REAL_ARG_LT
On entry, x=value.
Constraint: x0.0.

7 Accuracy

There are rare occasions when the relative accuracy attained is somewhat less than that specified by argument tol. However, the error should never exceed more than one or two decimal places. Note also that there is a limit of 18 decimal places on the achievable accuracy, because constants in the function are given to this precision.

8 Parallelism and Performance

s14bac is not threaded in any implementation.

9 Further Comments

The time taken for a call of s14bac depends on the precision requested through tol, and also varies slightly with the input arguments a and x.

10 Example

This example reads values of the argument a and x from a file, evaluates the function and prints the results.

10.1 Program Text

Program Text (s14bace.c)

10.2 Program Data

Program Data (s14bace.d)

10.3 Program Results

Program Results (s14bace.r)
GnuplotProduced by GNUPLOT 4.6 patchlevel 3 a x 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Example Program Incomplete Gamma Functions gnuplot_plot_1 P(a,x) gnuplot_plot_2 Q(a,x) 0 5 10 15 20 0 5 10 15 20