Dingle's final main rule, Berry's transition, and Howls' conjecture
Gerg\H{o} Nemes

TL;DR
This paper investigates the nuanced behavior of Stokes phenomena and asymptotic expansions, revealing higher-order effects that challenge traditional rules and confirming a conjecture by C. J. Howls.
Contribution
It demonstrates that higher-order Stokes phenomena can cause deviations from Dingle's rule, showing smooth, rapid transitions in hyperasymptotic re-expansions and verifying Howls' conjecture.
Findings
Higher-order Stokes phenomena cause multipliers to differ from 1/2.
Transitions in the remainder terms are rapid but smooth.
The paper confirms C. J. Howls' conjecture on these phenomena.
Abstract
The Stokes phenomenon is the apparent discontinuous change in the form of the asymptotic expansion of a function across certain rays in the complex plane, known as Stokes lines, as additional expansions, pre-factored by exponentially small terms, appear in its representation. It was first observed by G. G. Stokes while studying the asymptotic behaviour of the Airy function. R. B. Dingle proposed a set of rules for locating Stokes lines and continuing asymptotic expansions across them. Included among these rules is the "final main rule" stating that half the discontinuity in form occurs on reaching the Stokes line, and half on leaving it the other side. M. V. Berry demonstrated that, if an asymptotic expansion is terminated just before its numerically least term, the transition between two different asymptotic forms across a Stokes line is effected smoothly and not discontinuously as in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIterative Methods for Nonlinear Equations · Mathematical functions and polynomials · Stochastic processes and financial applications
