318 Chapter 5 Higher Dimensions and Other Coordinates
The functionφ(r)=J 0 (λr)is a solution of Eq. (6), and we wish to chooseλ
so that Eq. (7) is satisfied. Then we must have
J 0 (λa)= 0
or
λn=
αn
a, n=^1 ,^2 ,...,
whereαnare the zeros of the functionJ 0. Thus the eigenfunctions and eigen-
values of Eqs. (6), (7), and (8) are
φn(r)=J 0 (λnr), λ^2 n=
(
αn
a
) 2
. (9)
TheseareshownontheCD.
Returning to Eq. (5), we determine that the time factorsTnare
Tn(t)=exp
(
−λ^2 nkt
)
.
We may now assemble the general solution of the partial differential equa-
tion (1), under the boundary condition (2) and boundedness condition (8),
as a general linear combination of our product solutions:
v(r,t)=
∑∞
n= 1
anJ 0 (λnr)exp
(
−λ^2 nkt
)
. (10)
It remains to determine the coefficientsanso as to satisfy the initial condi-
tion (3), which now takes the form
v(r, 0 )=
∑∞
n= 1
anJ 0 (λnr)=f(r), 0 <r<a. (11)
While this problem is not a routine exercise in Fourier series or even a reg-
ular Sturm–Liouville problem (see Section 2.7, especially Exercise 6 there), it
is nevertheless true that the eigenfunctions of Eqs. (6) and (7) are orthogonal,
as expressed by the relation
∫a
0
φn(r)φm(r)rdr= 0 (n=m)
or
∫a
0
J 0 (λnr)J 0 (λmr)rdr= 0 (n=m).
More importantly, the following theorem gives us justification for Eq. (11).