1540470959-Boundary_Value_Problems_and_Partial_Differential_Equations__Powers

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0.2 Nonhomogeneous Linear Equations 19


b= 0 ,μ=ω:resonance. Now, sinceω=μ, the trial solution must be
revised to


up(t)=Atcos(μt)+Btsin(μt).

Substitution into the differential equation and simple algebra giveA=0,B=
f 0 / 2 μ,or


up(t)= f^0
2 μ

tsin(μt).

The general solution of the differential equation is


u(t)=

f 0
2 μtsin(μt)+c^1 cos(μt)+c^2 sin(μt).

(Remember thatb=0andω=μ.) The initial conditions givec 1 =c 2 =0, so
the solution of the initial value problem is


u(t)= f^0
2 μ

tsin(μt).

The presence of the multipliertmeans that the amplitude of the oscillation is
increasing. This is the phenomenon of resonance.


b> 0 :damped motion. The ideas are straightforward applications of the
techniques developed earlier. The trial solution is a combination of cos(μt)
and sin(μt).Somewhatlesssimplealgebragives


up(t)=f^0

(

(ω^2 −μ^2 )cos(μt)+μbsin(μt)

)

,

where =(ω^2 −μ^2 )^2 +μ^2 b^2 .Thegeneralsolutionofthedifferentialequation
may take different forms, depending on the relation betweenbandω.(See
Section 1.) Assuming the underdamped case holds, we have


u(t)=f^0

(

(ω^2 −μ^2 )cos(μt)+μbsin(μt)

)

+e−bt/^2

(

c 1 cos(γt)+c 2 sin(γt)

)

for the general solution of the differential equation. Here,γ=



ω^2 −(b/ 2 )^2
is real because we assumed underdamping.
Applying the initial conditions gives, after some nasty algebra,


c 1 =− f^0

(

ω^2 −μ^2

)

, c 2 =− f^0 γbω

(^2) +μ 2
2.

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