Additions to this web site no longer count towards good deed points.
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Week of...
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Notes and Links
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1
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Sep 10
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About This Class. Monday: Introduction and the Brachistochrone. Tuesday: More on the Brachistochrone, administrative issues. Tuesday Notes. Friday: Some basic techniques: first order linear equations.
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2
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Sep 17
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Monday: Separated equations, escape velocities. HW1. Tuesday: Escape velocities, changing source and target coordinates, homogeneous equations. Friday: Reverse engineering separated and exact equations.
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3
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Sep 24
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Monday: Solving exact equations, integration factors. HW2. Tuesday: Statement of the Fundamental Theorem. Class Photo. Friday: Proof of the Fundamental Theorem.
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4
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Oct 1
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Monday: Last notes on the fundamental theorem. HW3. Tuesday Hour 1: The chain law, examples of variational problems. Tuesday Hour 2: Deriving Euler-Lagrange. Friday: Reductions of Euler-Lagrange.
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5
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Oct 8
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Monday is thanksgiving. Tuesday: Lagrange multiplyers and the isoperimetric inequality. HW4. Friday: More Lagrange multipliers, numerical methods.
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6
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Oct 15
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Monday: Euler and improved Euler. Tuesday: Evaluating the local error, Runge-Kutta, and a comparison of methods. Friday: Numerical integration, high order constant coefficient homogeneous linear ODEs.
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7
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Oct 22
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Monday: Multiple roots, reduction of order, undetermined coefficients. Tuesday: From systems to matrix exponentiation. HW5. Term Test on Friday.
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8
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Oct 29
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Monday: The basic properties of matrix exponentiation. Tuesday: Matrix exponentiation: examples. Friday: Phase Portraits. HW6. Nov 4 was the last day to drop this class
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9
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Nov 5
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Monday: Non-homogeneous systems. Tuesday: The Catalan numbers, power series, and ODEs. Friday: Global existence for linear ODEs, the Wronskian.
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10
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Nov 12
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Monday-Tuesday is UofT November break. HW7. Friday: Series solutions for .
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11
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Nov 19
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Monday: is irrational, more on the radius of convergence. Tuesday (class): Airy's equation, Fuchs' theorem. Tuesday (tutorial): Regular singular points. HW8. Friday: Discussion of regular singular points..
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12
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Nov 26
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Monday: Frobenius series by computer. Qualitative Analysis Handout (PDF). Tuesday: The basic oscillation theorem. Handout on the Frobenius Method. HW9. Friday: Non-oscillation, Sturm comparison.
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13
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Dec 3
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Monday: More Sturm comparisons, changing the independent variable. Tuesday: Amplitudes of oscillations. Last class was on Tuesday!
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F1
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Dec 10
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F2
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Dec 17
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The Final Exam (time, place, style, office hours times)
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Register of Good Deeds
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Add your name / see who's in!
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Disclamer: This is a student prepared note based on the lecures of Friday, September 28th and Monday October 1st.
Lipschitz
Def. is called Lipschitz if (a Lipschitz constant of f) such that .
Note that any function that is Lipschitz is uniformly continuous, and that if a function f and its derivative are both continous on a compact set then f is Lipschitz.
Statement of Existence and Uniqueness Theorem
Thm. Existence and Uniqueness Theorem for ODEs
Let be continuous and uniformly Lipschitz relative to y. Then the equation with has a unique solution where where M is a bound of f on .
Proof of Existence
This is proven by showing the equation exists, given the noted assumptions.
Let and let . IF we can prove the following three claims, we have proven the theorem. The proofs of these claims will follow below.
Claim 1: is well-defined. More precisely, is continuous and , where b is as referred to above.
Claim 2: For , .
Claim 3: if is a series of functions such that , with equal to some finite number, then converges uniformly to some function
Using these three claims, we have shown that the solution exists.
Proofs of Claims
Proof of Claim 1:
The statement is trivially true for . Assume the claim is true for . is continuous, being the integral of a continuous function.
Proof of Claim 2:
Note that the sequence has equal to some finite number.
Proof of Claim 3: Assigned in Homework 3, Task 1, see page for solutions.
Proof of Uniqueness
Suppose and are both solutions. Let .
We have that for some constant k, which means , and that .
Let . Note that as in this case we are integrating over an empty set, and that U thus defined has . Then
Then , and .