I have stumbled upon the following integral involving the Hermite polynomials:
$$ I(m) = \int_\mathbb{R} e^{i m x} \left[ e^{-\frac{x^2}{2}} H_m(x) \right] dx \, , \quad m \in \mathbb{N} \cup \{0\} \, , $$
which is rather weird. It came up from trying to obtain an expansion in terms of the harmonic oscillator eigenfunctions from a Fourier series.
I have searched in function manuals and also tried to solve it term by term to find a predictable series, but the coefficients don't make sense to me. Does it look recognizable? Does anyone know how to solve it?
Here are closed expressions for the first six $m$ values:
\begin{align} I(0) &= \sqrt{2 \pi} \\ I(1) &= \sqrt{2 \pi} \left( \frac{2i}{\sqrt{e}} \right) \\ I(2) &= \sqrt{2 \pi} \left( -\frac{14}{e^2} \right) \\ I(3) &= \sqrt{2 \pi} \left( -\frac{180 i}{e^\frac{9}{2}} \right) \\ I(4) &= \sqrt{2 \pi} \left( \frac{3340}{e^8} \right) \\ I(5) &= \sqrt{2 \pi} \left( \frac{80600 i}{e^\frac{25}{2}} \right) \end{align}
There's obviously a rule of type $I(m) \propto \sqrt{2 \pi} e^{-m^2/2} i^m$, but the numerical coefficients follow some non-intuitive rule.