Method of Undetermined Coefficients
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Table of Contents
- Method of Undetermined Coefficients
- Key Definitions
- Method of Undetermined Coefficients
- Superposition Principle
#UCLA #Y1Q3 #Math33B
Method of Undetermined Coefficients
Key Definitions
Method of Undetermined Coefficients - used to find particular sol. to if:
- $p,q$ are constant functions
Trial Solution - arbitrary possible solution given by restraints:
- must include forcing term $g(t)$
- must be “closed” (similar) under derivation (e.g. trig funcs.)
Superposition Principle - used to deal with lin. combs. of forcing terms
Method of Undetermined Coefficients
Selecting a Trial Function
The trial solution depends on the forcing term, if $g(t)$ is not a sol.:
\(y_p(t)=ae^{rt}\)
\(y_p(t)=a\cos\omega t + b\sin\omega t\)
\(y_p(t)=p_0(t)\)
\(y_p(t)=p_0(t)\cos\omega t + p_1(t)\sin\omega t\)
\(y_p(t)=e^{rt}(a\cos\omega t + b\sin\omega t)\)
\(y_p(t)=e^{rt}(p_0(t)\cos\omega t + p_1(t)\sin\omega t)\)
s.t. $A,B,a,b,r,\omega\in\mathbb R$ and $P(t),p_0(t),p_1(t)$ are polynomials of the same degree
if $g(t)$ is a sol. use
\(ty_p(t)\quad\text{or}\quad t^2y_p(t)\)
Attempting a Solution
Set the trial equal to the forcing term and solve for the undetermined coefficient to find that the trial function is a particular solution
\(y_P(t)=g(t)\)
Superposition Principle
if $y_f(t)$ is a part. sol. to $y’‘+py’+qy=f(t)$ and $y_g(t)$ is a part. sol. to $y’‘+py’+qy=g(t)$, and given:
\(y''+py'+qy=\alpha f(t)+\beta g(t)\)
then the general solution is: