Frobenius Method Example 2

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  • Опубликовано: 20 дек 2024

Комментарии • 29

  • @ahmetyayliable
    @ahmetyayliable 7 лет назад +16

    you are the best mathematician i have ever seen Daniel. Thank you so much.

  • @raulalmaraz1397
    @raulalmaraz1397 7 лет назад +18

    I wish I had find out about your channel at the beginning of the semester 😭 Thank you Daniel

  • @SarahStarmer
    @SarahStarmer 4 года назад +1

    Thank you so much. Your videos really helped me.

  • @WeiWei-cb3qx
    @WeiWei-cb3qx 8 лет назад +1

    感謝您的影片 讓我對frobenius了解更深刻

    • @natukundafrances3134
      @natukundafrances3134 5 лет назад

      language barrier please

    • @Sednas
      @Sednas 11 дней назад

      @@natukundafrances3134 what's wrong with someone speaking chinese??

    • @natukundafrances3134
      @natukundafrances3134 10 дней назад

      @@Sednas that was half a decade ago. The world is evolving, I am probably nolonger male

  • @maktubvane
    @maktubvane 6 лет назад +1

    Thank you very much!!! I finally understood the method!!! You are awesome!

  • @Muradsahar
    @Muradsahar 6 лет назад +1

    what is the difference between singular and ordinary points...?

  • @PrinceSeven-yh9zs
    @PrinceSeven-yh9zs Год назад

    thank you sirrr.....we really appreciate you

  • @petersantiago9264
    @petersantiago9264 7 лет назад +1

    What is the difference between Frobenius and Bessel? I'm confused on how to find a difference between this final solution and Bessel's final solution

    • @daniel_an
      @daniel_an  7 лет назад +1

      Bessel functions are solutions to the Bessel's equation which can be solved by Frobenius method. The solutions obtained by Frobenius method are called Bessel functions. So Bessel functions are particular case of Frobenius solutions.

    • @petersantiago9264
      @petersantiago9264 7 лет назад

      Perfect. thank you

    • @natukundafrances3134
      @natukundafrances3134 5 лет назад

      @@daniel_an you are the best

  • @viewpoint2642
    @viewpoint2642 2 года назад

    Amazing work

  • @muhammad.waryamwaryam8929
    @muhammad.waryamwaryam8929 5 лет назад +1

    Sir you are awesome

  • @Neapoleone-Buonaparte
    @Neapoleone-Buonaparte 3 года назад

    ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT !

  • @muhammed96h
    @muhammed96h 8 лет назад +1

    a0(x1)+a2(x3)+a3(x4)+......=0
    u considered all the coefficients to be zero
    why not taking into consideration that a0(x1)+a2(x3)+a3(x4)+......am(x^m+1)=am+1(x^m+2)+am+2(x^m+3)+am+3(x^m+4)+....an(x^n+1)
    like
    a+b=0
    if a,b =0
    or a= - b

    • @daniel_an
      @daniel_an  8 лет назад +5

      The reason is that the equation a0(x1)+a1(x2)+a2(x3)+......=0 has to hold for all values of x in an open interval. In that case, there is a mathematical theorem called "identity theorem for power series" that proves the coefficients must be zero. A rough idea of why this should be true can be proven by differentiating the equation to make it a0+2a1(x1)+3a2(x2)+...=0 and then setting x=0. Repeating differentiation and setting x=0 shows that all coefficients must be zero. I hope this helps.

    • @scitwi9164
      @scitwi9164 7 лет назад

      You can look at it this way:
      On the left side of the equation there are some powers of `x` with some coefficients you want to figure out.
      On the right side of the equation there is 0, which can be thought of as if there was a power series too, but with each power's coefficient being 0 (that is, the first power of `x` appears 0 times, the second power of `x` appears 0 times, etc.). In other words, this:
      a₀·x⁰ + a₁·x¹ + a₂·x² + a₃·x³ + … = 0
      can be understood as this:
      a₀·x⁰ + a₁·x¹ + a₂·x² + a₃·x³ + … = 0·x⁰ + 0·x¹ + 0·x² + 0·x³ + …
      so you can now equate the coefficients of corresponding powers of `x` to find out that:
      a₀ = 0 (the coefficients of x⁰)
      a₁ = 0 (the coefficients of x¹)
      a₂ = 0 (the coefficients of x²)
      a₃ = 0 (the coefficients of x³)

      etc.
      We cannot equate `x` to 0, because then all of its subsequent powers would have to be 0. But this is just the "trivial" solution, i.e., the easiest way to zero everything out. This is boring, because it is a solution for every equation ;J So we're looking for the non-trivial one, in which `x` can be something else than 0 too - an _arbitrary_ value, actually. And the only way for it to work for _any_ value of `x` whatsoever (not just `x=0`), is if the coefficients of all the powers are 0 (that is, none of the powers appears in the equation).

  • @Still-Swing
    @Still-Swing 7 лет назад +1

    How come for this problem you didnt use indicial equation to find r?

    • @daniel_an
      @daniel_an  7 лет назад +5

      zhi zhang It is assumed to have been done beforehand.

  • @t-pain4700
    @t-pain4700 3 года назад

    Thank you thank you thank you!!!!!

  • @vishalmeena800
    @vishalmeena800 6 лет назад

    this is only wast of time and internet