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Question: Page 506, Prob 15, if:
 
Question: Page 506, Prob 15, if:
  
<math>2a_o=\frac{2Pi^4}{9}</math>
+
<math>2a_o=\frac{2\pi^4}{9}</math>
  
 
and
 
and
  
<math>(a_n)^2=\frac{(4Pi^2)(cos)^2(nx)}{9}</math>
+
<math>(a_n)^2=\frac{(4\pi^2)(cos)^2(nx)}{9}</math>
  
  
I dont understand where the <math>\frac{Pi^4}{4}</math> comes from?  Can anyone point out what I am doing wrong?
+
I dont understand where the <math>\frac{\pi^4}{4}</math> comes from?  Can anyone point out what I am doing wrong?
  
 +
Questions: prob 11 on page 512:
 +
 +
Should I still use equation 10 to compute A(w) or should I use equation 12 to
 +
compute B(w) since f(x) is odd.
 +
 +
When I find A or B, what should the integral range be?  (0 to pi?)
 +
 +
The function f is only defined for positive x.
 +
The Fourier Cosine Integral was cooked up by
 +
extending  f  to the negative real axis in
 +
such a way to make it an even function.  That
 +
made the  B(w)  integral turn out to be zero.
 +
 +
Hence, you only need to calculate the  A(w)
 +
integral in the form
 +
 +
A(w)= (2/pi) integral from 0 to infinity ...
 +
 +
Since f(x) is zero after  pi, your integral
 +
would only really go from  0  to  pi.
  
 
[[2010 MA 527 Bell|Back to the MA 527 start page]]  
 
[[2010 MA 527 Bell|Back to the MA 527 start page]]  

Revision as of 07:00, 6 November 2010

Homework 11 collaboration area

Question: I'm having trouble getting HWK 11, Page 499, Problem 3 started.

Answer: You will need to use Euler's identity

$ e^{i\theta}=\cos\theta+i\sin\theta $

and separate the definitions of the complex coefficients into real and imaginary parts. For example,

$ c_n=\frac{1}{2L}\int_{-L}^L f(x)e^{-inx}\,dx= $

$ =\frac{1}{2L}\int_{-L}^L f(x)(\cos(-nx)+i\sin(-nx))\,dx= $

$ =\frac{1}{2L}\int_{-L}^L f(x)(\cos(nx)-i\sin(nx))\,dx= $

$ =\frac{1}{2L}(\int_{-L}^L f(x)(\cos(nx)\,dx - i\int_{-L}^L f(x)\sin(nx)\,dx)= $

$ =\frac{1}{2}(a_n-ib_n). $

Do the same thing for $ c_{-n} $ and combine.


Question: Page 506, Prob 15, if:

$ 2a_o=\frac{2\pi^4}{9} $

and

$ (a_n)^2=\frac{(4\pi^2)(cos)^2(nx)}{9} $


I dont understand where the $ \frac{\pi^4}{4} $ comes from? Can anyone point out what I am doing wrong?

Questions: prob 11 on page 512:

Should I still use equation 10 to compute A(w) or should I use equation 12 to compute B(w) since f(x) is odd.

When I find A or B, what should the integral range be? (0 to pi?)

The function f is only defined for positive x. The Fourier Cosine Integral was cooked up by extending f to the negative real axis in such a way to make it an even function. That made the B(w) integral turn out to be zero.

Hence, you only need to calculate the A(w) integral in the form

A(w)= (2/pi) integral from 0 to infinity ...

Since f(x) is zero after pi, your integral would only really go from 0 to pi.

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Ph.D. on Applied Mathematics in Aug 2007. Involved on applications of image super-resolution to electron microscopy

Francisco Blanco-Silva