EIGENFUNCTION EXPANSIONS ASSOCIATED WITH SECOND-ORDER DIFFERENTIAL
EQUATIONS BY E. C. TITCHMARSH FJR. S. SAVILIAN PROFESSOR OF
GEOMETRY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD OXFORD AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
1946 OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS AMEN HOUSE, E. G. 4 LONDON EDINBURGH
GLASGOW NEW YORK TORONTO MELBOURNE CAPE TOWN BOMBAY CALCUTTA MADRAS
GEOFFREY CUMBERLEGE PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY PREFACE THE idea of
expanding an arbitrary function in terms of the solutions of a
second-order differential equation goes back to the time of Sturm
and Liouville, more than a hundred years ago. The first
satisfactory proofs were constructed by various authors early in
the twentieth century. Later, a general theory of the singular
cases was given by Weyl, who-based i on the theory of integral
equations. An alternative method, proceeding via the general theory
of linear operators in Hilbert space, is to be found in the
treatise by Stone on this subject. Here I have adopted still
another method. Proofs of these expansions by means of contour
integration and the calculus of residues were given by Cauchy, and
this method has been used by several authors in the ordinary
Sturm-Liouville case. It is applied here to the general singular
case. It is thus possible to avoid both the theory of integral
equations and the general theory of linear operators, though of
course we are sometimes doing no more than adapt the latter theory
to the particular case considered. The ordinary Sturm-Liouville
expansion is now well known. I therefore dismiss it as rapidly as
possible, and concentrate on the singular cases, a class which
seems to include all the most interesting examples. In order to
present a clear-cut theory in a reasonablespace, I have had to
reject firmly all generalizations. Many of the arguments used
extend quite easily to other cases, such as that of two
simultaneous first-order equations. It seems that physicists are
interested in some aspects of these questions. If any physicist
finds here anything that he wishes to know, I shall indeed be
delighted but it is to mathematicians that the book is addressed. I
believe in the future of mathematics for physicists, but it seems
desirable that a writer on this subject should understand physics
as well as mathematics. E. C. T. NEW COLLEGE, OXFOBD, 1946.
CONTENTS I. THE STUEM-LIOUVILLE EXPANSION ... 1 II. THE SINGULAB
CASE SERIES EXPANSIONS . . 19 III. THE GENERAL SINGULAR CASE . . .
.39 IV. EXAMPLES 69 V. THE NATURE OF THE SPECTRUM . . .97 VI. A
SPECIAL CONVERGENCE THEOREM . . .118 VII. THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE
EIGENVALUES . . 124 VIII. FURTHER APPROXIMATIONS TO JV A . . .135
IX. CONVERGENCE OF THE SERIES EXPANSION UNDER FOUBIER CONDITIONS
148 X. SUMMABILITY OF THE SERIES EXPANSION . . 163 REFERENCES 172
THE STURM-LIOUVILLE EXPANSION 1.1. Introduction. Let L denote a
linear operator operating on a function y y x. Consider the
equation Ly - AT, 1.1.1 where A is a number. A function which
satisfies this equation and also certain boundary conditions e. g.
which vanishes at x a and x b is called an eigenfunction. The
corresponding value of A is called an eigenvalue. Thus ifi t n x is
an eigenfunction corresponding to an eigenvalue n, L x Mx. 1.1.2
The object of this book is to study the operator,72 where q x is a
given function of x defined over some given interval a, b. In this
case y satisfies the second-order differential equation and tff n x
satisfies s A- W0- 1J. 5 If we take this and the corresponding
equation with m instead of n, multiply by ift m x 9 n x
respectively, and subtract, we obtain Hence b A M - AJ J lUaOiM dx
0 m a- a a if i m x and rl x both vanish at x a and x b or satisfy
a more general condition of the same kind. If m A n, it follows
that b t m x t n x dx Q. 1-1.6 a 4967 2 THE STURM-LIOUVILLE
EXPANSION Chap. I By multiplying if necessary by a constant we can
arrange that x dx l. 1.1.7 The functions n x then form a normal
orthogonal set...
General
Imprint: |
Read Books
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
November 2008 |
First published: |
November 2008 |
Authors: |
E.C. Titchmarsh
|
Dimensions: |
216 x 140 x 14mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover - Laminated cover
|
Pages: |
188 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4437-2063-2 |
Categories: |
Books >
Science & Mathematics >
Mathematics >
General
Promotions
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LSN: |
1-4437-2063-1 |
Barcode: |
9781443720632 |
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