Higher Engineering Mathematics

(Greg DeLong) #1
518 DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS

andBn

(cnπ

L

)
is twice the mean value of

g(x)sin

nπx
L

betweenx=0 andx=L

i.e. Bn=

L
cnπ

(
2
L

)∫L

0

g(x)sin

nπx
L

dx

or Bn=

2
cnπ

∫L

0

g(x)sin

nπx
L

dx (9)

Summary of solution of the wave equation

The above may seem complicated; however a prac-
tical problem may be solved using the following
8-point procedure:



  1. Identify clearly the initial and boundary
    conditions.

  2. Assume a solution of the formu=XTand express
    the equations in terms ofX andT and their
    derivatives.

  3. Separate the variables by transposing the equation
    and equate each side to a constant, say,μ;two
    separate equations are obtained, one inxand the
    other int.

  4. Letμ=−p^2 to give an oscillatory solution.

  5. The two solutions are of the form:


X=Acospx+Bsinpx

and T=Ccoscpt+Dsincpt.
Thenu(x,t)={Acospx+Bsinpx}{Ccoscpt+
Dsincpt}.


  1. Apply the boundary conditions to determine con-
    stantsAandB.

  2. Determine the general solution as an infinite sum.

  3. Apply the remaining initial and boundary condi-
    tions and determine the coefficientsAnandBn
    from equations (8) and (9), using Fourier series
    techniques.


Problem 5. Figure 53.2 shows a stretched
string of length 50 cm which is set oscillating by
displacing its mid-point a distance of 2 cm from
its rest position and releasing it with zero veloc-

ity. Solve the wave equation:

∂^2 u
∂x^2

=

1
c^2

∂^2 u
∂t^2

wherec^2 =1, to determine the resulting motion
u(x,t).

u = f(x)

0 25

2

4

u

(x

, 0)

50 x(cm)

Figure 53.2

Following the above procedure,


  1. The boundary and initial conditions given are:


u(0,t)= 0
u(50,t)= 0

}
i.e.fixed end points

u(x,0)=f(x)=

2
25

x 0 ≤x≤ 25

=−

2
25

x+ 4 =

100 −2x
25

25 ≤x≤ 50

(Note:y=mx+cis a straight line graph, so the
gradient,m, between 0 and 25 is 2/25 and the

y-axis intercept is zero, thusy=f(x)=

2
25

x+0;
between 25 and 50, the gradient=− 2 /25 and the

y-axis intercept is at 4, thusf(x)=−

2
25

x+4).

[
∂u
∂t

]

t= 0

= 0 i.e. zero initial velocity.


  1. Assuming a solutionu = XT, where X is a
    function ofxonly, andTis a function oftonly,


then

∂u
∂x

=X′Tand

∂^2 u
∂x^2

=X′′Tand

∂u
∂y

=XT′and

∂^2 u
∂y^2

=XT′′. Substituting into the partial differen-

tial equation,

∂^2 u
∂x^2

=

1
c^2

∂^2 u
∂t^2

gives:

X′′T=

1
c^2

XT′′ i.e.X′′T=XT′′sincec^2 =1.
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