1549301742-The_Theory_of_Difference_Schemes__Samarskii

(jair2018) #1
102 Basic Concepts of the Theory of Difference Schemes

where E > 0 is an arbitrary number, which is sometimes referred to as the
1::-inequality, permitting us to establish

(12)

1
l(u, v)I < II u II · II v II < E II u 11
2
+ 4 E II v 11
2
·


  1. The search for eigenfunctions and eigenvalues in the example of the
    simplest difference problem. The method of separation of variables being
    involved in the apparatus of mathematical physics applies equelly well to
    difference problems. Employing this method enables one to split up an
    original problem with several independent variables into a series of more
    simpler problems with a smaller number of variables. As a rule, in this
    situation eigenvalue problems with respect to separate coordinates do arise.
    Difference problems can be solved in a quite similar manner.
    In this section we consider the problem of searching for eigenvalues of
    the simplest difference operator.
    Results we are going to obtain here will be needed in the sequel because
    applying the method of separation of variables leads to problems just of the
    same type. In the next chapters we give various examples of employing this
    method for the discovery of stability and convergence of concrete difference
    schemes.
    Before giving further motivations, we would like to recall the basic as-
    pects concerned with the elementary problem of determining eigenfunctions
    and eigenvalues for the differential equation


(13) u"(x) + .\u(x) = 0, 0 < x < l, u(O) = u(l) = 0.


The nontrivial solutions of this problem, that is, the eigenfunctions uk and
the appropriate eigenvalues .\k are expressed by




  1. fi. k7rx
    uk(x) = y l sm -
    1
    -,




  2. The eigenfunctions Hk constitute what is called an orthonormal
    system:




1
J 1Lk(x) um(x) clx = likm,
0

where likm = {


0,
1,

k of m,
k =in.


  1. If f ( x) is twice differentiable and satisfies the nonhomogeneous
    boundary conditions f(O) = J(l) = 0, it arranges itself into a uniformly
    convergent series
    00
    f(x) = L f1; uk(x)
    k=l

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