If one defines a class of diagrams by the linear combination (Eq. 5.18 Ref.1)
(See G. Stell in Ref. 2)
 
one has the exact integral equation
 
The Percus-Yevick integral equation sets D(r)=0.
Percus-Yevick (PY) proposed in 1958 Ref. 3
 
The PY closure can be written as (Ref. 3  Eq. 61)
![{\displaystyle \left.f[\gamma (r)]\right.=[e^{-\beta \Phi }-1][\gamma (r)+1]}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/396258fc70ca1bf8927e95f168cb5a4d439b4a7f) 
or
 
or (Eq. 10 \cite{MP_1983_49_1495})
 
or (Eq. 2 of \cite{PRA_1984_30_000999})
 
or in terms of the bridge function
 
Note: the restriction $-1 < \gamma (r) \leq 1$ arising from the logarithmic term \cite{JCP_2002_116_08517}.
The HNC and PY are from the age of {\it `complete ignorance'} (Martynov Ch. 6) with
respect to bridge functionals.
A critical look at the PY was undertaken by  Zhou and Stell in \cite{JSP_1988_52_1389_nolotengoSpringer}.
==References==\cite{PR_1958_110_000001}
- [RPP_1965_28_0169]
- [P_1963_29_0517_nolotengoElsevier]
- [PR_1958_110_000001]
- [\cite{PR_1958_110_000001}