Eng Analysis Cheat Notes
Eng Analysis Cheat Notes
dx
Mdx N y M x dy
dy
p x y q x , and is homogeneous if q x 0
dx
p x dx
M N
y
x
f x, y
is homogeneous of degree n if
non-empty interval. Also, if M ( x, y)dx N ( x, y)dy 0 and M and N are both homogeneous functions of the same degree, the DE is
homogeneous. The transformation y vx ; dy
dv converts the homogeneous equation into a separable one. It may also be
dx
easier to use x uy ;
vx
dx
dx
du
u y
dy
dy
M N
y
x
e
f x dx
g y dy
y p x y q x y f x
Assume that
Ay1 By2 0
Ay1 By2 0
Ay1 By2 f x
and
N M
g y
M
x y
or
y
d tan 1
x2 y 2
x
y ay by f x
yh c1e
m1t
p x y q x yn
for
bn xn y n bn1 x n1 y n1
z ln x
and
x ez
m1 i
y p x y q x y f x
st
v w to get
y1w 2 y1 py1 w f
yh e t c1 cos t c2 sin t
4te sin 2t must be the result of a repeated complex root where 1 and 2 , so m 1 2i and the DE must
2
D 1 4 . Combine both differential operators being careful to account for repeated roots. Differentiate the particular part
nd
substitute
D n 1 y
Substitute the derivatives back into the original equation and it will become a linear DE with constant coefficients.
m2 i
Method of Undetermined Coefficients: For the non-homogeneous part, determine a DE that would have that solution. For example,
and
dny 1
D D 1 D 2 D 3
dx n x n
y y1v
m1t
b2 x 2 y b1xy b0 y 0
dy 1 dy
dx x dz
c2te
y y1
y1v 2 y1 py1 v f
v.
y p x y q x y 0
p(x) and q(x) are analytic functions (have power series representations)
Substitute
y am x m a0 a1 x a2 x 2
m0
of the solution and substitute back into the original equation to find the coefficients of the particular solution.
( D 1) y sin t
2
m 1
yh c1 cos t c2 sin t
m2
and
yh c1em1t c2em2t
y p At cos t Bt sin t
y2
0
y2
Ay1 By2 C y3 0
Ay1 By2 C y3 0
Ay By C y f x
2
3
1
xdx ydy 1
d ln x 2 y 2
x2 y 2
2
y1
y1
as long as
dy
1
dv which results in the transformed DE dv
v n1
n 1 p x v n 1 q x
dx n 1
dx
dx
n 1
Transform back using v y
x
xdy ydx
d
y2
y
xdy ydx
1 x y
d ln
x2 y 2
2 x y
EX:
M N
f x
N
y x
and
Also, disregard constants of integration when finding A and B, since they are intermediate solutions. This method extends to higher
order equations, for example for a third order equation:
and
y p A x y1 B x y2
yh c1 y1 c2 y2
yp Ay1 By2
be
then
dx
B0
where either
xdy ydx
y
d
x2
x
A 1 2
Bt cos t
Radius of convergence
R 1 lim m am
m
or
R 1 lim
am1
am
Initial Value Problem: For and IVP where the coefficients are analytic at xo the solution can be expanded as the power series
1 n
n
y x y0 x x0
n
!
n 0
m 0
y0
y xy e x y 4
m0
m0
y0 4
General solution
P x P x
P x
x 2 m
m ! m 1
m
J n x 1 J n x
n
x2 y xy x 2 y 0 so = 0
1 x 2 k
k
2
2k
k 1 2 k !
1 x 2k
y1 2 k
2
k 0 2 k !
A field
y2 y1 ln x
1 1
k 1
2 3
1
k
Linear Algebra
3
1
y x 1 40 x x 2 x 3
2
6
2 m
v et t 1dt
If and - are integers then the solutions obtained are LINEARLY DEPENDENT bc
y and evaluate
J n x 1 J n x
y x c1 J x c2 J x
y0 y0 xy0 e x y0 e x y0 4 0 3 11 1 4 1
x 2 m
m! m 1
J x
y y xy e x y e x y 0
2 m
x 2 mn
m ! n m !
m
y0 )
1
1
y x y0 y0 x y0x 2 y0x3
2!
3!
0
y0 0 4 e 1 4 y0 4 1 y0 3
J x
2 m n
And
(n)
0
y0 1
Solve for
and
Jn x
1. If
2.
is any set of two or more elements for which the following operations hold:
0 such that a 0 a
and
0a 0
Can use power series method for ordinary points. For singular points must use Frobenius method.
A singular point is REGULAR if
y cn ( x x0 )n r
y n r cn ( x x0 )n r 1
n 0
y cn x n r
6. For every
r is repeated, there are two solutions, on Frobenius solution, and another of the form
y2
substituting for
3.
y2 y1 ln x cn* x n r
*
n
. Use
c0
y1 .
a there exists a
and its derivatives to obtain an equation for k and a recurrence relation for
cn* . If k = 0
n 0
then the solution is a second Frobenius solution. If the second root produces a second Frobenius solution is isnt necessary
to use the log term???? If it is necessary, use
Bessel Functions Type 1
x y xy x
2
a such that a a 0
xy yx for all x, y
Commutative:
Associative:
xy z x yz for all x, y, z
Distributive:
If
and
i.
ii.
iii.
if x y z x y x z
if x y z xz yz
y0
1
y1 c0 2 n
x 2 n
n
n 0 2 n !1 2 3
If the r differ by and integer, there may not be a second Frobenius solution. To find out, substitute the equation
y2 ky1 ln x cn* x n r2
1 such that 1 a a 1 a 1 a
n 1
Substitute
a b
n 0
necessarily be 0 since r may be non-zero, so summations in derivatives start at 0, ALSO must assume co is nonzero).
Frobenius Method: Substitute the summations into the DE, shift indices, and equate coefficients to obtain an indicial equation. If:
1.
r are distinct and differ by a non-integer, then there are two Frobenius solutions based on the two rs
2.
the
and
b0
n 0
Also
4. If
Q x and
2 R x are analytic, and is IRREGULAR if not.
x x0
x x0
P x
P x
A B B A and
Amn B pq C mq
as long as
n p
A B C A B C
AB BA in general, A BC AB , c AB cA B A cB , A B C AB BC , B C A BA CA
EX: 3 2
1
Null matrix: all elements are 0, note that just because
Symmetric Matrices:
Am An Amn
An1 AAn
A1 A
Powers of a matrix:
AI A
IA A
A
T
A B
A B
cA
3 1
A I
0
square matrix
cA
1.
ABC
C B A
T
A AT
If
A A
and
BB
BT AT BA AB in general so AB AB
AB
then
A diag a1
A AT
an
a2
** eigenvalues of a symmetric matrix are real, eigenvectors of distinct eigenvalues are orthogonal
Skew symmetric
A AT
No-negative definite
x Ax 0 x 0
Orthogonal
A A I
Indefinite
Ak 0
Nilpotent
A I
2
aii aij
j i
or
A A
x, y
a12
a1n
a21
a22
a2 n
an1
an 2
ann
a11
n2
A A
3.
4.
Interchanging any two rows or columns only changes the sign of the determinant.
5.
If any two rows of A are proportional or if a row is a linear combination of other rows, then
6.
Multiplying all elements of any row/column by a scalar also multiplies the determinant by that scalar.
7.
Any multiple of a row/ column can be added to any other row/column without changing the value of the determinant.
8.
If
9.
det cA c n det A
Skew Hermitian
and
rank B rB
and
rank AB rank C rC
0 rC min rA , rB
then
The Trace of a matrix is the sum of the diagonal elements, and is also the product of the eigenvalues
Matrix Inversion: if
A A . All complex A A
T
A A
A1
Unitary
A1 A
a11
a21
a1n
a2 n
a11
a21
a11
a31
a12
a32
a11 a13
a31 a33
a11 a1n
a31 a3n
a11
an1
a12
an 2
a11
an1
a11
an1
a13
a23
Tr AB Tr BA
Tr AB Tr A Tr B
in general
a13
an 3
C T where C is the adjoint matrix formed by the cofactors of A (see Laplace expansion)
A
A1
exists), then
x1
, x2 2 ,
Where
k , k = 1, 2, , n is the determinant obtained from A by removing the kth column and replacing it with
det A
and
a1n
ann
2.
3.
0,
4.
remove all elements of the jth row and kth column
2.
3.
The value of the determinant is the sum of the products of the elements in any row (or column) by their corresponding
cofactors.
Ann , B A1 , BA AB I ( BA A1 A AB AA1 I )
j k
A 0.
Tr A B Tr A Tr B
a12
a22
AB A B
j i
a11
a21
by
3 7 2 14 2(7) 35
A AT
2. If
1.
a jk
1.
Laplace expansion:
a jk
The Rank of a matrix is the size of the largest non-zero determinant that can be formed from A. It is also the number of linearly
independent vectors constituting a matrix. Reduce to UT form and count non-zero rows.
a11
2.
k is an integer
also
2 3
3
2
1 2 1
13 1
2 1
2 1
1 2
4 2
4 1
aii aij
Conjugate matrix: replace each element with complex conjugate. All elements real
Associate matrix: transpose of Conjugate Hermitian
Ax y Ay 0
Involutory
Ak 1 0
A2 A
xT Ax 0
Positive definite
Idempotent
in general
BT AB is symmetric and BT AB BT AT BT BT AT B
T
2 using row 1
3
1
11
xn 0
solution.
Ajk
Ax x x 0
P1 AP is a diagonal matrix iff the columns of P are a set of n linearly independent
Find
C det A I det I A
0 0 t a
u
ta
1
a t t0 1 2a t0 a t t0 a
L f t a u t a e as F s
C = 0)
2.
A I is singular.
Plug s back into the original equation to get xs (likely to be non-unique, so pick easy values)
3.
an1 x an x n an an1x
p x x n a1 x n1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
a2 x n2 a1x n1
0 t t0 a
t t0 a
a t t0 dt 1
t t0 lim a t t0
Dirac delta fx
a 0
t t dt 1
L t t0 L lim a t t0 e st
a0
0
is the companion matrix of the polynomial.
0
0
an
0
0
an 1 an 3
0
an 4
1
a1
t t0 f t dt f t0
The eigenvalues of this matrix are the roots of the monic polynomial P.
Convolution Theorem
Cayley Hamilton Theorem: Every matrix is a solution of its own characteristic equation.
Let A be the nxn matrix whose characteristic polynomial is
C det A I det I A a0 a1 a2
an1
C A a0 I a1 A a2 A
2
n 1
an1 A
If
n 1
and
Also
x2
x3
u2 v2
um vm
vm u1
u1
v2 u1
2
u1
u1
u1
u3 v3
vm u2
u2
T A set of vectors
u2
v3 u1
u1
u1
vm um1
um1
v3 u2
u2
x xj 0 j i
f g g f
dy
y 2x
dt
sX 8 2 X 3Y
L x X
s 2 X
L y Y x 0 8 y 0 3
3Y 8
2 X s 1 Y 3
sY 3 Y 2 X
Use Cramers Rule:
u2
3 s 1
X
s2
3
um1
dx
2x 3y
dt
T
i
then
u1 v1 ,
is defined as
L1 G s g t
T 0 . The length of
and
L1 F s G s f u g t u du f g
Orthogonal vectors:
L1 F s f t
8s 17
8s 17
5
3
s 3s 4 s 1 s 4 s 1 s 4
L1 X x 5et 3e4t
s 1
s2 8
Laplace Transforms
L f t e
st
f t dt
L f t sL f t f 0
For a periodic function f t f t
1
L f t
1 e s
s st f t dt
L1 ebt F s f t b
L
0
L f n t s n L f t s n1 f 0 s n2 f 0
For a periodic function f t f t
1
L f t
1 e s
s st f t dt
L eat f t F s a
sa
f t 0 when t 0
L tf t F s
F s
is defined for
F s
1
f z dz L f t
s
s
L t n f t 1 F s
n
n = positive integer
s b
Transforming polynomials:
where
k b 2a and h c b2 4a
f n1 0
2
s2
3
3
s 1
3s 22
3s 22
5
2
s 3s 4 s 1 s 4 s 1 s 4
2
L1 Y Y 5et 2e4t