Part I. The following two formulas
\begin{equation}
{}_1F_2\biggl(1; n+1, n+\frac{3}{2}; -\frac{x^2}{4}\biggr)
=(-1)^n\frac{(2n+1)!}{x^{2n+1}} \Biggl[\sin x-\sum_{k=0}^{n-1} (-1)^k\frac{x^{2k+1}}{(2k+1)!}\Biggr]
\end{equation}
and
\begin{equation}
{}_1F_2\biggl(1;n+\frac{1}{2}, n+1; -\frac{x^2}{4}\biggr)
=(-1)^n\frac{(2n)!}{x^{2n}} \Biggl[\cos x-\sum_{k=0}^{n-1} (-1)^k\frac{x^{2k}}{(2k)!}\Biggr]
\end{equation}
for $n\in\mathbb{N}$ and $x>0$ were published on Page 16 of the reference [1] below. On the other hand, we know
\begin{equation}
{}_1F_2\biggl(1;1,\frac{3}{2}; -\frac{x^2}{4}\biggr)
=\frac{4 \operatorname{arcsinh}\bigl(\frac{x}{2}\bigr)}{x \sqrt{x^2+4}\,}
\end{equation}
and
\begin{equation}
{}_1F_2\biggl(1;\frac{1}{2},1; -\frac{x^2}{4}\biggr)
=\frac{2}{\sqrt{x^2+4}\,}.
\end{equation}
These four formulas reveal that the hypergeometric functions $$
{}_1F_2\biggl(1;n,n+\frac12;-x^2\biggr)\quad\text{and}\quad {}_1F_2\biggl(1;n-\frac12,n;-x^2\biggr)
$$
for $n\in\mathbb{N}$ and $x>0$ are elementary! In other words, the hypergeometric function
$$
{}_1F_2\biggl(1;\frac{n}2,\frac{n+1}2;-x^2\biggr), \quad n\in\mathbb{N}
$$
has a closed-form expression.
Part II. Among other things, combining the above first two formulas with Theorems 1 and 2 in the reference [1] below, we can conclude that both of the hypergeometric function ${}_1F_2\bigl(1; n+1, n+\frac{3}{2}; -\frac{x^2}{4}\bigr)$ for $n\ge1$ and the hypergeometric function ${}_1F_2\bigl(1;n+\frac{1}{2}, n+1; -\frac{x^2}{4}\bigr)$ for $n\ge2$ are positive and decreasing in $x\in(0,\infty)$, while both of them are concave in $x\in(0,\pi)$. Summing up, the hypergeometric function
$$
{}_1F_2\biggl(1; \frac{n+3}{2},\frac{n+4}{2}; -\frac{x^2}{4}\biggr), \quad n\in\mathbb{N}
$$
is positive and decreasing in $x\in(0,\infty)$, while it is concave in $x\in(0,\pi)$.
Part III. Considering the first two formulas in Part I above, we observe that, in the reference [2] below, among other things, the function
\begin{equation*}
\ln\biggl[{}_1F_2\biggl(1;n+\frac{1}{2}, n+1; -\frac{x^2}{4}\biggr)\biggr], \quad n\in\mathbb{N}
\end{equation*}
was expanded into a Maclaurin power series at the point $x=0$, as well as the function
\begin{equation*}
\frac{\ln\bigl[{}_1F_2\bigl(1;\frac{5}{2}, 3; -\frac{x^2}{4}\bigr)\bigr]}{\ln\cos x}
\end{equation*}
was proved to be decreasing on $\bigl(0,\frac{\pi}2\bigr)$.
For more information, please refer to Remark 7 in the paper [3] below.
References
- Tao Zhang, Zhen-Hang Yang, Feng Qi, and Wei-Shih Du, Some properties of normalized tails of Maclaurin power series expansions of sine and cosine, Fractal and Fractional 8 (2024), no. 5, Article 257, 17 pages; available online at https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract8050257.
- A. Wan and F. Qi, Power series expansion, decreasing property, and concavity related to logarithm of normalized tail of power series expansion of cosine, Electron. Res. Arch. 32 (2024), no. 5, 3130--3144; available online at https://doi.org/10.3934/era.2024143.
- Yue-Wu Li and Feng Qi, A new closed-form formula of the Gauss hypergeometric function at specific arguments, Axioms 13 (2024), no. 5, Article 317, 24 pages; available online at https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms13050317.