All Questions
7 questions
11
votes
1
answer
725
views
Chebyshev's other inequality
It is a simple fact, the granddaddy of correlation inequalities that if $f,g$ are monotone functions on $[0,1]$ then $$\int_0^1 f(x)g(x) dx \ge \int_0^1 f(x) dx \int_0^1 g(x) dx.$$ In their famous ...
13
votes
1
answer
661
views
Poincaré on analytic dependence on parameters of solutions of linear differential equations
There is the following important General Principle: if a parameter enters
in a linear differential equation additively, for example
$$\frac{d^2w}{dx^2}+(q(x)+\lambda)w=0,$$
where the parameter is $\...
13
votes
5
answers
3k
views
Reference request: Oldest calculus, real analysis books with exercises?
Per the title, what are some of the oldest calculus, real analysis books out there with exercises? Maybe there are some hidden gems from before the 20th century out there.
Edit. Unsolved exercises ...
12
votes
4
answers
2k
views
History of ODE and PDE reference request
Is there any reference (book or articles) which made the history (up to the modern times) and the conceptual development of Ordinary Differential Equations and Partial Differential Equations? It will ...
6
votes
0
answers
227
views
Origins of the generalized shift operator exp(t*g(z)d/dz)
Charles Graves in the 1850s investigated iterated operators of the form $g(x) \frac {d}{dx}$ (see page 13 in The Theory of Linear Operators ... (Principia Press, 1936) by Harold T. Davis). Graves ...
1
vote
0
answers
617
views
History of Cauchy-Euler Equations
As I teach a class in ODE, and following this post and Rota's paper, I wandered what is the history of the research of -
$\sum\limits_{k=0}^n a_k x^k y^{(k)}(x) = g(x),\quad \forall k=0,\cdots ...
7
votes
2
answers
880
views
Survey of the history of calculus?
Boyer 1939 is a nice readable survey of the history of the calculus, but it's showing its age. Discussing the notion of instantaneous velocity, he has:
Mathematics knows no minimum interval of ...