I am considering the following equation (a Generalized hyper-geometric equation): $$\left(D-\beta_1\right)\left(D-\beta_2\right)f(x)-x\left(D+1-\alpha_1\right)\left(D+1-\alpha_2\right)f(x)=0$$ where in this case I specifically take $\alpha_1=\frac{1}{4}$, $\alpha_2=\frac{5}{4}$, $\beta_1=\frac{3}{4}$, $\beta_2=-\frac{1}{4}$. In fact this equation has the following two solutions: $$f_1(x)=x^{3/4}\,{}_2F_1\left(\frac{3}{2},\frac{1}{2};2;x\right)$$ The second solution is quite unfamiliar for me, which is denoted by MeijerG[{{}, {1/4, 5/4}}, {{-(1/4), 3/4}, {}}, x] in Mathematica. It has the following integral representation: $$f_2(x)=\frac{1}{2\pi i}\int_L\frac{\Gamma\left(s-\frac{1}{4}\right)\Gamma\left(\frac{3}{4}+s\right)}{\Gamma\left(s+\frac{1}{4}\right)\Gamma\left(\frac{5}{4}+s\right)}x^{-s}ds$$ with $L$ a proper contour. It can be seen that $\Gamma\left(s-\frac{1}{4}\right)\Gamma\left(\frac{3}{4}+s\right)$ has a simpole pole at $s=\frac{1}{4}$, and has double poles at $s=-\frac{3}{4}$, $s=-\frac{7}{4}$, $s=-\frac{11}{4}$,...I sum up the residue to get a series expansion: $$f_2(x)=\frac{2}{\pi}x^{-1/4}+\frac{x^{3/4}}{\pi^2}\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{\Gamma\left(\frac{3}{2}+n\right)\Gamma\left(\frac{1}{2}+n\right)}{n!\Gamma\left(n+2\right)}\left(-\psi\left(-n-\frac{1}{2}\right)-\psi\left(\frac{1}{2}-n\right)-\ln x\right)x^{n}$$ where I use $\psi(z)=\frac{\Gamma^{\prime}(z)}{\Gamma(z)}$ The problem is, does this series expansion converge on the whole complex plane? Can I use this expansion to determine the monodromy around both $0$ and $\infty$?
Thanks to the hint from @Mariusz Iwaniuk, I know that by using the following command in Mathematica:
MeijerG[{{}, {1/4, 5/4}}, {{-(1/4), 3/4}, {}}, x] // FunctionExpand, the output may indicate that $f_2(x)$ vanishes outside the unit disk $0<|x|<1$. However, another question comes out: since the equation is invariant under $x\to \frac{1}{x}$, I can construct the third solution as $f_3(x)=f_2(1/x)$, which is nonzero only near the $\infty$. Then we just have three independent solutions at hand. What's the problem with my reasoning?
MeijerG[{{}, {1/4, 5/4}}, {{-(1/4), 3/4}, {}}, x] // FunctionExpandandMeijerG[{{}, {1/4, 5/4}}, {{-(1/4), 3/4}, {}}, x] == Sum[-(((1 - x)^k Gamma[-(1/2) + k] Gamma[1/2 + k])/( 2 \[Pi] x^(1/4) Gamma[1 + k]^2)), {k, 0, Infinity}]for: $0<x<1$ – Mariusz Iwaniuk May 29 '22 at 10:43