In 1893 Giuseppe Lauricella defined and studied four hypergeometric series FA, FB, FC, FD of three variables. They are (Lauricella 1893):

for |x1| + |x2| + |x3| < 1 and

for |x1| < 1, |x2| < 1, |x3| < 1 and

for |x1|1/2 + |x2|1/2 + |x3|1/2 < 1 and

for |x1| < 1, |x2| < 1, |x3| < 1. Here the Pochhammer symbol (q)i indicates the i-th rising factorial of q, i.e.

where the second equality is true for all complex
except
.
These functions can be extended to other values of the variables x1, x2, x3 by means of analytic continuation.
Lauricella also indicated the existence of ten other hypergeometric functions of three variables. These were named FE, FF, ..., FT and studied by Shanti Saran in 1954 (Saran 1954). There are therefore a total of 14 Lauricella–Saran hypergeometric functions.
Generalization to n variables
These functions can be straightforwardly extended to n variables. One writes for example

where |x1| + ... + |xn| < 1. These generalized series too are sometimes referred to as Lauricella functions.
When n = 2, the Lauricella functions correspond to the Appell hypergeometric series of two variables:

When n = 1, all four functions reduce to the Gauss hypergeometric function:

Integral representation of FD
In analogy with Appell's function F1, Lauricella's FD can be written as a one-dimensional Euler-type integral for any number n of variables:

This representation can be easily verified by means of Taylor expansion of the integrand, followed by termwise integration. The representation implies that the incomplete elliptic integral Π is a special case of Lauricella's function FD with three variables:

Finite-sum solutions of FD
Case 1 :
,
a positive integer
One can relate FD to the Carlson R function
via
with the iterative sum
and
where it can be exploited that the Carlson R function with
has an exact representation (see [1] for more information).
The vectors are defined as
where the length of
and
is
, while the vectors
and
have length
.
Case 2:
,
a positive integer
In this case there is also a known analytic form, but it is rather complicated to write down and involves several steps.
See [2] for more information.
References
- Appell, Paul; Kampé de Fériet, Joseph (1926). Fonctions hypergéométriques et hypersphériques; Polynômes d'Hermite (in French). Paris: Gauthier–Villars. JFM 52.0361.13. (see p. 114)
- Exton, Harold (1976). Multiple hypergeometric functions and applications. Mathematics and its applications. Chichester, UK: Halsted Press, Ellis Horwood Ltd. ISBN 0-470-15190-0. MR 0422713.
- Lauricella, Giuseppe (1893). "Sulle funzioni ipergeometriche a più variabili". Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo (in Italian). 7 (S1): 111–158. doi:10.1007/BF03012437. JFM 25.0756.01. S2CID 122316343.
- Saran, Shanti (1954). "Hypergeometric Functions of Three Variables". Ganita. 5 (1): 77–91. ISSN 0046-5402. MR 0087777. Zbl 0058.29602. (corrigendum 1956 in Ganita 7, p. 65)
- Slater, Lucy Joan (1966). Generalized hypergeometric functions. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-06483-X. MR 0201688. (there is a 2008 paperback with ISBN 978-0-521-09061-2)
- Srivastava, Hari M.; Karlsson, Per W. (1985). Multiple Gaussian hypergeometric series. Mathematics and its applications. Chichester, UK: Halsted Press, Ellis Horwood Ltd. ISBN 0-470-20100-2. MR 0834385. (there is another edition with ISBN 0-85312-602-X)