Spring 2007 Homework Problems |
|
© Leon van Dommelen |
Analysis II Spring 2007
Homework Problems
Do not print out this page. Keep checking for changes. Complete assignment
will normally be available the day after the last lecture whose material
is included in the test (Saturday, normally).
- 01/17 W
-
- p13, q31
- p13, q32
- p14, q48
- p32, q66
- p32, q69
- p32, q87
- p53, q32
- 01/24 W
-
- p54, q47
- p78, q54
- p78, q62
- p78, q64
- p79, q70
- p79, q72
- p80, q96
- 02/31 W
-
- p78, q46
- p78, q60
- p80, q84
- p80, q102
- p102, q32
- p103, q44
- 02/07 W
-
- p104, q63
- p104, q62 (use Cartesian coordinates except in the actual integration)
- p132, q39 (use Cartesian coordinates except in the actual integration)
- p132, q42
- p132, q44
- p133, q56
- p160, q37
- p160, q38
- 02/14 W
-
- p160, q43
- p160, q44
- p160, q47 (finish)
- Find the scale factors
and
of polar coordinates
in two dimensions.
- Use them to find the Laplacian in polar coordinates.
- The PDE problem
in the first quadrant,
with boundary conditions
,
has two possible
solutions:
for
and
for
in Cartesian coordinates.
in polar coordinates.
Show that both solutions satisfy the PDE and boundary conditions.
So, which solution is correct, and why?
- Consider the following steady heat conduction problem for a
triangular plate of a material with unit heat conduction
coefficient
:
- the temperature is zero on the side
of the plate;
- the heat flux coming out of the side
of the plate is
zero;
- the heat flux entering the third side
is constant
and equal to one.
Write the partial differential equation and all three boundary
conditions as mathematical equations for the temperature
.
- Which of the following possibilities is the correct temperature
distribution for the previous problem: (a)
;
(b)
;
(c)
?
Explain why.
- If steady heat conduction satisfies
,
what does the divergence theorem tell us about Neumann boundary
conditions? Explain this physically. Does the same apply to
the unsteady heat equation?
- Which of the following situations is described by the
inhomogeneous Laplace equation (the Poisson equation):
- the membrane of a drum when it is being played;
- the membrane of a drum when the drum sticks and various
other stuff are resting on top of it;
- the membrane of a drum when you drop it.
Explain why.
- 02/23 F
-
- Show that the following solution satisfies both the heat
equation
and the wave equation
for
and
:
It is a valid solution to only one equation, however. Which one,
and why?
- Show that the following solution satisfies both the heat
equation
and the wave equation
for
and
:
It is a valid solution to neither equation, however. Why not?
- Write the physical problem of heat conduction in a iron bar
(iron heat conduction coefficient
W/m-K, density
kg/m
, specific heat
kJ/kg-K)
of length 2 m and diameter 10 cm in terms of the temperature
if one end is at 25
C and 20 W of heat is entering the bar at
the other end. Also, at time zero the bar is at a uniform
25
C throughout. List PDE, BCs, and IC in the
-plane
with all numerical constants filled in, but do not try to solve.
We will learn how to solve later, Hint: use units!
- For acoustics in a pipe, the (small) axial air velocity
satisfies Newton's second law
where
is the mass per unit volume, which can be approximated
as constant and equal to 1.225 kg/m
and
is the pressure
in Pa. The pressure variations are caused by motion-induced
fluid compression according to the “continuity equation”
where
is the speed of sound, 340 m/s. Reduce these two
equation to a wave equation for the pressure
. Then write
the problem for the gage pressure in a pipe of length 0.5 m if
one end of the pipe is closed (zero fluid velocity at that end)
and the other end of the pipe is open. Assume the initial
pressure in the pipe is uniform at 5 Pa gage, and the air velocity
is zero, but then at time
zero we take our thumb of the open end and from then on the
pressure at the open end is ambient at zero gage. List PDE, BCs,
and IC in the
-plane with all numerical constants filled in,
but do not try to solve. We will learn how to solve later, Hint:
use units!
- Identify the wave propagation speed
in a string under
a tension force of 30 N with a mass per unit length of 0.002 kg/m.
Hint; use units!
- Solve the one-way wave equation in the infinite domain
if the initial entropy
is
a given function
. Note that the flow velocity
simply translates the entropy distribution along the
-axis.
- 2.19(b)
- 02/28 W
-
- 2.19(d)
- 2.19(h)
- 2.20
- 2.21 (a) and (b) in 3 spatial dimensions
- 03/14 W
-
- Use the 2D PDE transformation formulae derived in class to
transform the Laplace equation
to polar
coordinates and see whether you get the correct result.
- 2.24
- 2.25
- Get rid of the first order derivatives in the problem 2.25 by
defining a new unknown
where
are the rescaled coordinates and
,
, and
are constants to be found.
- 03/21 W
-
- 2.22 b, g (sketch the characteristics)
- 2.27 a, b
- 2.28 d (solve the PDE)
- 2.28 f (solve the PDE)
- 2.28 c (solve the PDE)
- 2.28 k
- 2.28 b Check that indeed
and
and find
. We
learned previously that constant coefficient elliptic problems can
be reduced to the Laplacian by rotating the coordinates to
, and then stretching these to orthogonal coordinates
. But the coordinates
and
are not
orthogonal (the lines of constant
and
are under an
oblique angle.) Should not the transformation that reduces the
PDE to the Laplace equation be unique??
- Show that one of the below Laplace equation problems has a
unique solution,
, but the other has multiple solutions:
Hint: to show uniqueness, use the notes. To show nonuniqueness
of the other problem, guess a simple nonzero solution.
- Solve the heat conduction problem in infinite two-dimensional space
,
if heat is being added to the
point at the origin at a unit rate.
- Find the Green's function of the Poisson equation in infinite
two-dimensional space. Comment on its behavior at large distances
compared to the three-dimensional Green's function.
- Solve the Poisson equation in infinite two-dimensional space.
Rigor is not required.
- 03/23 F
-
- Consider the Poisson or Laplace problem in a two-dimensional
finite region
:
with
and
given constants and
and
given functions
(and
in the Laplace case.)
Suppose we define
outside the region
to be a chosen
function
that satisfies the Laplace equation, like
for example
. Explain why the thus defined
in all of space is not the infinite space solution
that you derived for the infinite space problem. After all,
has the same Laplacian everywhere:
inside
and
outside
. Should not solutions to
the infinite space Poisson equation be unique?
The integral
is not quite proper. For one, G is infinite at the point
so we would be integrating infinity. Also,
integrals must be done over finite regions, not infinite ones.
Define
more carefully to avoid these problems
by using limits of integrals, sketching the region of integration.
- Work out the more careful expression for
to
get a relation showing the difference between
and
. Hint: use Green's second identity. You may assume
that at a large distance
from the point
,
can be approximated as
where
and
are
constants.
- Except for the constant, graphically explain the physical
meaning of the effect of the boundary conditions, i.e. explain the
difference between
and
in physical terms.
- 03/28 W
-
- Show that if
satisfies the Laplace equation
inside the unit circle around the origin, then
satisfies the Laplace
equation outside the unit circle. Hint: write
where
then
work out
in terms of the
derivatives
of
and show it is a multiple of the Laplacian of
.
- For the Dirichlet problem for the Laplace equation in a unit
circle,
choose
in Green's integral expression for
so that
the unknown boundary heat flux disappears.
- To get rid of the constant
, show that it is equal to
by using the mean value theorem 3.1, proved in problem 3.1.
- Show that Green's formula then reduces to the two-dimensional
case of (3.5) in the book.
- Work out the integral to obtain the familiar form of Poisson's
integral formula in two dimensions, given in problem 3.37.
- 04/04 W
-
- 3.38 Think of it as a problem with negative temperatures at one
side of the circle and positive at the other side. The temperature at
the center is asked.
- 3.39 Hint: the solution inside the circle is easy to guess.
- 3.41 Remember Gauss.
- 4.20 A number
is rational if it can be written as the ratio of
a pair of integers, eg 1.5 = 3/2 = 6/4 = 9/6 = ...
It is irrational if it cannot, like
. Near any
rational number, irrational numbers can be found infinitely closely
nearby, and vice versa. For nonzero solutions, try
, which satisfies the wave equation
and the boundary conditions at
and
and the
initial condition at
. See when it satisfies the end
condition at
.
This is the boundary value problem for the wave equation, and would
be perfectly OK for if it would have been the Laplace equation.
(For the Laplace equation, the
becomes
and only a unique, zero, solution is possible.)
The wave equation needs two initial conditions at
, not one
condition at
and one at
.
- Suppose the initial conditions to the wave equation
in infinite space
are
nonzero only from
to
. Identify the regions in the
-plane where
will be zero and where it will in general be
nonzero.
- Plot the solution to the wave equation in an infinite acoustic pipe,
if the initial conditions are
where
for all
while
for
and
everywhere else. In particular, plot
versus
at times
,
,
,
,
, and
.
Hint: First plot the anti-derivative of
, call it
,
against
. The integration constant is not important, you can
take
. For example,
will be one then. Write the D'Alembert solution in terms of
function
, then graphically evaluate and sum the relevant
parts.
- 5.25
- 5.27 (b)
- Refer to problem 5.34. Find the general solution to
using the method of characteristics. Write down both
possible forms in which the solution can be written.
(
or
.)
- Verify that both of the solutions
and
given in 5.34
are in each region of at least one of the two forms and identify
what the arbitrary function in the general solution is then.
- Neatly draw the characteristic lines of each of the solutions
and
as well as the shocks at
and
of
,
and the single shock at
of
. Put several
characteristics in each region (including in
for
and
for
.) Draw up to
, say.
- Convert the PDE
to a conservation form
and thus determine what functions
is. What is
the conserved integral?
- Verify that all three shocks satisfy the shock conservation
law
assuming
. Here 1 is the point
immediately to the left of the shock and 2 the point immediately
to the right of it, and
is the shock velocity.
- Show that one of the three shocks does not satisfy the
“entropy condition”
. Such a shock
represents an unphysical “expansion shock,” and the
corresponding solution must be rejected. For physical solutions
the velocity
of the characteristics before the shock must
be greater than the shock velocity
for the characteristics
to catch up with the shock. The shock velocity
must be
greater than the velocity
of the characteristics behind the
shock for the shock to be able to catch up with those
characteristics.
- 04/11 W
-
- Solve 7.27 using D'Alembert, graphically identifying all
functions involved in terms of the given
and
.
- Using the solution of the previous problem, and taking
,
,
, and
, draw
as a
function of
. Note that the boundary conditions are now
satisfied, though the initial condition did not.
- Using the solution of the previous problems, find
.
- Find the separation of variables eigenfunctions of 7.27. Make
very sure you do not miss one.
- Write the solution to
in terms of the derived
eigenfunctions and plug into the PDE to find expressions for the
coefficients. Be very careful to solve special cases separately
to get them right.
- Find the undetermined coefficients in the solution for
by
setting
and
equal to the given functions
and
. Assume again that
,
and
. Hint: the coefficients corresponding to
can
easily be guessed.
- Make a computer plot of
versus
at times
,
,
,
,
, and
. Use whatever
software you like. Note: the error is of order
, if
is
the eigenfunction number, so you want to sum at least about 15
terms for one percent error. Compare the solution at
with
the one you got from D'Alembert, and the solution at
with
the given initial condition. Since
initially, you would
expect
. Is it?
- Replot summing only one, two, and three eigenfunctions and
examine how the solution approaches the exact one if you sum more
and more terms. Comment in particularly on the slope of the
profiles at time
and
at the boundaries. What should
the slope be at those times? What is it?
- 04/18 W
-
- Refer to problem 7.19. Find a function
that satisfies
the inhomogeneous boundary conditions.
- Continuing the previous problem, define
. Find
the PDE, BC and IC satisfied by
.
- Find eigenfunctions in terms of which
may be written, and
that satisfy the homogeneous boundary conditions.
- Solve for
using separation of variables in terms of
expressions in terms of the known functions
,
, and
.
- 7.26. Note: you can simplify the problem to a standard heat
conduction one by defining
for
suitable constants
and
. Alternatively, you can
just solve it directly. Either way, the answer in the book is
wrong.
- 7.35. Minor error in the book's answer.