Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Mathematical symbols
- 1 PRELIMINARY CALCULUS
- 2 VECTOR ALGEBRA
- 3 CALCULUS OF VECTORS
- 4 VECTOR OPERATORS
- 5 ORDINARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
- 6 SERIES SOLUTIONS OF DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
- 7 SUPERPOSITION METHODS
- 8 FOURIER METHODS
- 9 PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
- 10 SEPARATION OF VARIABLES
- 11 NUMERICAL METHODS
- 12 CALCULUS OF VARIATIONS
- 13 GENERAL EIGENVALUE PROBLEM
- 14 MATRICES
- 15 CARTESIAN TENSORS
- 16 COMPLEX VARIABLES
- SOLUTIONS AND HINTS FOR EXERCISES AND EXAMPLES
- INDEX
6 - SERIES SOLUTIONS OF DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Mathematical symbols
- 1 PRELIMINARY CALCULUS
- 2 VECTOR ALGEBRA
- 3 CALCULUS OF VECTORS
- 4 VECTOR OPERATORS
- 5 ORDINARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
- 6 SERIES SOLUTIONS OF DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
- 7 SUPERPOSITION METHODS
- 8 FOURIER METHODS
- 9 PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
- 10 SEPARATION OF VARIABLES
- 11 NUMERICAL METHODS
- 12 CALCULUS OF VARIATIONS
- 13 GENERAL EIGENVALUE PROBLEM
- 14 MATRICES
- 15 CARTESIAN TENSORS
- 16 COMPLEX VARIABLES
- SOLUTIONS AND HINTS FOR EXERCISES AND EXAMPLES
- INDEX
Summary
In the preceding chapter the solution of ordinary differential equations in terms of standard functions or numerical integrals was discussed, and methods for obtaining such solutions explained and illustrated. The present chapter is concerned with a further method of obtaining solutions of ordinary differential equations, but this time in the form of a convergent series which can be evaluated numerically [and if sufficiently commonly occurring, named and tabulated]. As previously, we will be principally concerned with second-order linear equations.
There is no distinct borderline between this and the previous chapter; for consider the equation already solved many times in that chapter
The solution in terms of standard functions is of course
but an equally valid solution can be obtained as a series. Exactly as in ▸1 of chapter 5 we could try a solution
and arrive at the conclusion that two of the an are arbitrary [a0 and a1] and that the others are given in terms of them by
Hence the solution is
It hardly needs pointing out that the series in the brackets are exactly those known as cos x and sin x and that the solution is precisely that of (6.2); it is simply that the cosine and sine functions are so familiar that they have a special name which is adequate to identify the corresponding series without further explanation.
It will also be true of most of our examples that they have a name (although their properties will be slightly less well known), but the methods we will develop can be applied to a variety of equations, both named and un-named.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Mathematical Methods for the Physical SciencesAn Informal Treatment for Students of Physics and Engineering, pp. 150 - 172Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1974