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Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
How to prove orthogonality on a set of functions?
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[QUOTE="Jay9313, post: 4580500, member: 352823"] Oh, I was confused. I thought that if you multiply all of the functions together, then they will end up being an odd function, meaning that the entire set multiplied together is mutually orthogonal. BUT the question was asking about two functions at a time being multiplied together. It makes a lot more sense. Now I just have to prove which functions you can and can't multiply together to form a subset. Thank you! [/QUOTE]
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How to prove orthogonality on a set of functions?
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