1549301742-The_Theory_of_Difference_Schemes__Samarskii

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24 Preliminaries


  1. The second-order difference equations with constant coefficients. If
    the coefficients of the difference equation


(44) £ [Yi] = Ai Yi -i - Ci Yi + Bi Yi+ 1 = 0


do not depend on i, meaning Ai = a, Ci = c and Bi = b for all i = 1, 2, ... ,
a solution of the following equation

(45) byi+1-CYi+ay,_1 =0, bf:-0, af:-0,


1nay be found in explicit form. In so doing, let y?) and y~^2 ) be two solutions
of difference equation ( 44) that are linearly independent if the equalities

i=0,1,2, ... ,


hold only for C 1 = C 2 = 0. This condition can be replaced by the usual
require1nent for the determinant of the syste1n of algebraic equations

cl Yi + c2 Yi - o ,
{

(!) '(2)_


(!) '. (2) -
C1 Yi+m + C2 Yi+m - 0 , rn= 1,2, ... ,

saying that, for all 1: and in


.0.i,i+m =

( I)
Yi
(!)
Yi+m

y~2)
(2)
Yi+m

f:- 0.

By pursuing the parallel we see, in particular, that the condition

Y?)
(I )
Yi+ I

y~2)
(2)
Yi+I

f:- 0

is analogous to that of the linear independence for solutions u( x) and u( x)
of an ordinary second-order differential equation:


u(x)
(u(x))'

u(x)
(u(x))'

f:- 0.

Eliminating y~~ 1 and y~~ 1 with the aid of equation ( 44) we get



  • 1 ( (2) (!) (!) (2)) - Ai ( (!) (2) (I) (2))
    t.i,i+1 - B· 1 Bi Yi+1 Yi - Bi Yi+l Yi - - B 1 Yi Yi-l - Yi-l Yi ,

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