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I did the same thing and got the same answer. After the first integration of sinh(t) you get cosh(t) -1 and integrate that to find the solution of sinh(t )- t. | I did the same thing and got the same answer. After the first integration of sinh(t) you get cosh(t) -1 and integrate that to find the solution of sinh(t )- t. | ||
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+ | Question from [[User:Roe5|T. Roe]] 21:28, 6 October 2013 (UTC): | ||
+ | I have a question on Lesson 19 #19. I have set up the equations as follows: | ||
+ | |||
+ | <math>\mathcal{L}(f')=s\mathcal{L}(f)-f(0)</math> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <math>f(0)=0</math> | ||
+ | |||
+ | so | ||
+ | |||
+ | <math>\mathcal{L}(f)=\mathcal{L}(f')/s.</math> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Using the information from class I get: | ||
+ | |||
+ | <math>\mathcal{L}(f')=\frac{2\omega}{(s^2+4\omega^2)}</math> | ||
+ | |||
+ | and | ||
+ | |||
+ | <math>\mathcal{L}(f)=\frac{2\omega}{s(s^2+4\omega^2)},</math> | ||
+ | |||
+ | but the book as well as mathematica output a solution of | ||
+ | |||
+ | <math>\mathcal{L}(f)=\frac{2\omega^2}{s(s^2+4\omega^2)}.</math> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Can someone explain to me where the extra <math>\omega</math> is coming from? | ||
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[[2013_Fall_MA_527_Bell|Back to MA527, Fall 2013]] | [[2013_Fall_MA_527_Bell|Back to MA527, Fall 2013]] |
Revision as of 16:28, 6 October 2013
Homework 6 collaboration area
I am sort of stuck on Lesson 19 #26:
First of all, are the instructions correct when they say "...if L(F) equals:" --- Is it F or f(t)?
Secondly, I am not sure how to proceed with this. Thm 3 says the inverse Laplace is 1/s times the F(s) function. Therefore I can factor out a 1/s^3 to get : (1/s^3)*(1/(s^2-1)) ...Not sure where to go from here, or if my approach is wrong...
Thanks - Mac
I think you need to factor out s^2 to get (1/(s^2)*(s^2-1)), also question says inverse transform by integral which is done in example 3. If you will integrate inverse transform of (1/(s^2-1)) i.e., sinh t twice you will get inverse transform of (1/(s^4-s^2)) i.e., sinh t - t. (I am not sure, if I am right)
-- Kunal
Response from Mickey Rhoades (mrhoade~~)
I did the same thing and got the same answer. After the first integration of sinh(t) you get cosh(t) -1 and integrate that to find the solution of sinh(t )- t.
Question from T. Roe 21:28, 6 October 2013 (UTC):
I have a question on Lesson 19 #19. I have set up the equations as follows:
$ \mathcal{L}(f')=s\mathcal{L}(f)-f(0) $
$ f(0)=0 $
so
$ \mathcal{L}(f)=\mathcal{L}(f')/s. $
Using the information from class I get:
$ \mathcal{L}(f')=\frac{2\omega}{(s^2+4\omega^2)} $
and
$ \mathcal{L}(f)=\frac{2\omega}{s(s^2+4\omega^2)}, $
but the book as well as mathematica output a solution of
$ \mathcal{L}(f)=\frac{2\omega^2}{s(s^2+4\omega^2)}. $
Can someone explain to me where the extra $ \omega $ is coming from?