1540470959-Boundary_Value_Problems_and_Partial_Differential_Equations__Powers

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0.5 Green’s Functions 43



  1. Inside a nuclear fuel rod, heat is constantly produced by nuclear reaction.
    Atypicalrodisabout3mlongandabout1cmindiameter,sotemperature
    variationalongthelengthismuchlessthanalongaradius.Thus,wetreat
    the temperature in such a rod as a function of the radial variable alone. Find
    this temperatureu(r), which is the solution of the boundary value problem
    1
    r


d
dr

(

rdu
dr

)

=−g
κ

, 0 <r<a,

u(a)=T 0.


  1. For the problem of Exercise 6, find the temperature at the center of the
    rod,u( 0 ), using these values for the parameters:a= 0 .5cm,thepower
    densityg=418 W/cm^3 =100 cal/s cm^3 ,conductivityκ= 0 .01 cal/s cm◦C,
    and the surface temperatureT 0 = 325 ◦C.

  2. A model for microwave heating of food uses this equation for the tempera-
    tureu(x)in a large solid object:
    d^2 u
    dx^2


=−Ae−x/L, 0 <x.

Here,Ais a constant representing the strength of the radiation and prop-
erties of the object, andLis a characteristic length, known as penetration
depth, that depends on frequency of the radiation and properties of the ob-
ject. (Typically,Lis about 12 cm in frozen raw beef or 2 cm thawed.) Show
that the boundary conditionu′( 0 )=0 is incompatible with the condition
thatu(x)be bounded asxgoes to infinity. [See C.J. Coleman, The mi-
crowave heating of frozen substances,Applied Math. Modeling, 14 (1990):
439–443.]


  1. Solve the differential equation in Exercise 8 subject to the conditions


u( 0 )=T 0 , u(x) bounded.

0.5 Green’s Functions


The most important features of the solution of the boundary value problem,^1


d^2 u
dx^2 +k(x)

du
dx+p(x)u=f(x), l<x<r, (1)
αu(l)−α′u′(l)= 0 , (2)
βu(r)+β′u′(r)= 0 , (3)

(^1) The primes on the constantsα′,β′are not to indicate differentiation, of course, but to
show that they are coefficients of derivatives.

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