mathwizarddud
- 25
- 0
Solve the eigenvalue problem
\frac{d^2 \phi}{dx^2} = -\lambda \phi
subject to
\phi(0) = \phi(2\pi)
and
\frac{d \phi}{dx} (0) = \frac{d \phi}{dx} (2 \pi).
I had the solution already, but am looking for a much simpler way, if any.
EDIT:
Sorry that I accidentally posted this twice; I meant to edit the post, but not sure why the edited post becomes a new one...
\frac{d^2 \phi}{dx^2} = -\lambda \phi
subject to
\phi(0) = \phi(2\pi)
and
\frac{d \phi}{dx} (0) = \frac{d \phi}{dx} (2 \pi).
I had the solution already, but am looking for a much simpler way, if any.
EDIT:
Sorry that I accidentally posted this twice; I meant to edit the post, but not sure why the edited post becomes a new one...