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2 votes
0 answers
74 views

Approximate solutions to $x''(t)=-cx + f(t)x$

I recently studied a problem which involved two particles joined by a harmonic spring moving in a potential and through some manipulation, I obtained the equation $x''(t) = -\omega^2x + f(t)x$, where $...
FusRoDah's user avatar
  • 3,738
32 votes
8 answers
4k views

Motivation and physical interpretation of the Laplace transform

Concerning the one-sided Laplace transform, $$\mathcal{L}\{f\}(s) = \int_0^\infty f(t)e^{-st} dt$$ what is a motivation to come up with that formula? I am particularly interested in "physical&...
AlpinistKitten's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
294 views

Temporal evolution of a globally hyperbolic spacetime

Any globally hyperbolic spacetime can be assigned a global function of time as Hawking has demonstrated for stably causal spacetime. (Any globally hyperbolic spacetime is also stably causal). For ...
Bastam Tajik's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
75 views

Is there an analytic formula (or even a name...) for a plane curve with curvature inversely proportional to x?

I'm interested in plane curves with curvature inversely proportional to distance from the axis: $$\kappa(t) = \left(\frac{x'(t) y''(t) - y'(t)x''(t)}{(x'(t)^2 + y'(t)^2)^{3/2}} \right) = \frac{1}{a x(...
Jacob Schwartz's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
63 views

Set of eigenvalues of the boundary problem

I'm looking for the results about the set of eigenvalues of boundary problem for differential equation \begin{equation} \bigl(p(x) u'(x; \lambda) \bigr)' + q(x) u(x; \lambda) = -\lambda w(x) u(x; \...
StaTik's user avatar
  • 19
3 votes
2 answers
447 views

Legendre equation: An interpretation [closed]

I am a student of physics and, especially in quantum mechanics, we are presented with the Legendre equation: \begin{eqnarray} (1-x^2)y''-2xy'+l(l+1)y=0. \end{eqnarray} Doing some calculations, we ...
Leonardo S. Vieira's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
84 views

Diffraction across an absorbing wall

I need help finding the procedure for the solution of the following differential equation. This is equation is: Find $u:\mathbb{R}^2 \to \mathbb{C}$ such that for $C>0$ $ \begin{cases} u_{xx}+ ...
Sebastian Naranjo Alvarez's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
261 views

A hyperbolic partial differential equation (wave-like) with variable-dependent coefficient and possibly singular in one variable

First, I beg your pardon since the title of the question is a bit confusing I guess. I'm working on a physical equation of the wave-like form. Explicitly, it reads $$\left[\left(\cos\phi\partial_{z}+\...
FraSchelle's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
738 views

Helmholtz equation Poynting vector integral

The Maxwell's equation for harmonic time dependent field in vacuum is \begin{align} \nabla \times B + i\omega E &= 0\\ \nabla \times E - i\omega B &= 0 \\ \nabla \cdot B &= 0 \\ \nabla \...
Hans's user avatar
  • 2,239
2 votes
0 answers
192 views

Diffusion equation on mixing of diffusing particles

I am trying to study mixing of diffusing particles like it was done by E. Ben-Naim On the Mixing of Diffusing Particles. The picture below shows the idea how permutations and inversion numbers reflect ...
Mikhail Gaichenkov's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
645 views

Path integrals for stochastic equations

Does there exist a rigorous mathematical proof for path integral representations given in the physics literature? See for example http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/9912209v1 For imaginary time rigorous ...
bob's user avatar
  • 31
2 votes
1 answer
2k views

Derivation of Bessel functions

I am writing a summary on a work on Fluid Dynamics that develops irrotational flow states that appear to interact amongst each other according to the equations of Electromagnetism http://arxiv.org/abs/...
user34091's user avatar
15 votes
9 answers
4k views

Newton equations, second order equation and (im)possible motions

I am am currently studying Newtonian mechanics from a conceptional and axiomatic point of view. Now, if I am not mistaken, one (but surely not all) statement of Newtons second law about nature is, ...
student's user avatar
  • 1,222
27 votes
11 answers
4k views

What kind of Lagrangians can we have?

In any physics book I've read the Lagrangian is introuced as as a functional whose critical points govern the dynamics of the system. It is then usually shown that a finite collection of non-...
Dorian's user avatar
  • 2,641