1540470959-Boundary_Value_Problems_and_Partial_Differential_Equations__Powers

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94 Chapter 1 Fourier Series and Integrals


3.an=

1

a

∫a

−a

f(x)cos

(nπx
a

)

dx→0asn→∞;

bn=^1 a

∫a

−a

f(x)sin

(

nπx
a

)

dx→0asn→∞.

4.The Fourier series offconverges tofin the sense of the mean.

Properties 2 and 3 are very useful for checking computed values of Fourier
coefficients.


EXERCISES


1.Use properties of Fourier series to evaluate the definite integral

1
π

∫π

−π

(

ln

∣∣

∣∣2cos

(

x
2

)∣∣

∣∣

) 2

dx.

(Hint: See Section 10, Eq. (4), and Section 5, Eq. (5).)
2.Verify Parseval’s equality for these functions:
a.f(x)=x, − 1 <x<1;
b.f(x)=sin(x), −π<x<π.
3.What can be said about the behavior of the Fourier coefficients of the fol-
lowing functions asn→∞?
a.f(x)=|x|^1 /^2 , − 1 <x<1;
b.f(x)=|x|−^1 /^2 , − 1 <x<1.
4.How do we know thatENhas a minimum and not a maximum?
5.If a functionfdefined on the interval−a<x<ahas Fourier coefficients

an= 0 , bn=√^1
n

,

what can you say about
∫a

−a

f^2 (x)dx?

6.Show that, asn→∞, the Fourier sine coefficients of the function

f(x)=^1 x, −π<x<π,

tend to a nonzero constant. (Since this is an odd function, we can take the
cosine coefficients to be zero, although strictly speaking they do not exist.)
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