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I need a series expansion to describe a general gaussian-like (bell shaped) function. I couldn't find a rigorous definition of "bell shaped" online but in essence the function should have the following:

  1. $f(x)>0$ (positive)
  2. $f(x)=f(-x)$ (symmetric)
  3. $\int _{-\infty}^{\infty}f(x)dx <\infty$
  4. $f^{(n)}(x) = 0$ has exactly $n$ roots (bell shaped)
  5. $f^{(n)}(x) \rightarrow 0 $ as $|x| \rightarrow \infty$ for all $n$

Example would be: Gaussian, Lorentzian curve, Voigt profile, Sech.

I need a series expansion that the gives approximants for all such functions. The series expansion should only give "bell shaped" functions for any choice coefficients (as with fourier series - for example - only producing periodic functions).

Does this exist?

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You could try a series of Hermite functions, $$f(x)=\sum_{n=0}^N a_n \frac{d^{2n}}{dx^{2n}}e^{-x^2}.$$ The function $f$ satisfies your conditions 1,2,3,5 by construction, and if the $a_n$'s decay rapidly with $n$ it will look "bell-shaped".

Actually, for unconstrained $a_n$'s, and including also odd derivatives, this expansion is dense in $L^2(\mathbb{R})$, see Approximating with Gaussians.

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    $\begingroup$ The other nice thing about this setup is if we replace 5) by $f$ being in Schwartz space then this is easily read on the $a_n$ which must decay faster than inverse polynomials. $\endgroup$ Commented Mar 7, 2022 at 16:36

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