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Harmonic Wave Equation

 
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Feb16-13, 03:26 PM   #1
 

Harmonic Wave Equation


Dear Guys,

Does f(x,t)=exp[-i(ax+bt)^2] qualify as a harmonic wave? Please help!

Manish
Germany
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Feb16-13, 03:30 PM   #2
 
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Quote by reedc15 View Post
Dear Guys,

Does f(x,t)=exp[-i(ax+bt)^2] qualify as a harmonic wave? Please help!

Manish
Germany
Yes. Separate the real (cosine) and imaginary parts (sine).
Feb17-13, 10:04 AM   #3
 
Ok, but what about the quadratic exponent? Would my wave equation still be harmonic?
Feb17-13, 11:52 AM   #4
 

Harmonic Wave Equation


i actually think not, cos(x^2) or cos(2x*t) is not an harmonic wave.
in general, an harmonic function f is a function that gives f''=A*f when A is a constant. the function you gave do not fulfil this requirement.
Feb17-13, 12:07 PM   #5
 
Yes, cos(x^2) is not a harmonic wave, but cos[(kx+wt)^2] is, I think. "f''=A*f when A is a constant" this requirement is also fulfilled, as f comes from w, and it will take integer multiple (given by constant A)
Feb18-13, 03:52 AM   #6
 
I didn't understand what you mean,
d^2 f/dx^2= -f*(2xk^2+2kwt)-2k^2*sin((kx+wt)^2)
and nothing here suggest that there exist a constant A that for every t and every x
d^2 f/dx^2=Af.
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