dreNL
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I have the following problem.
If
\int_0^\infty f(s)ds=\int_0^\infty g(s)ds
What are sufficient conditions such that f(s)=g(s)?
I know that two functions f(s),g(s) are equal if their domain, call it S, is equal and if f(s)=g(s) for all s\in S but I can't figure this one out.
The full problem is actually
-\int_0^\infty\frac{d}{ds}\left(f(\vec{r}+s\hat{\Omega},E,\hat{\Omega})e^{-\Sigma_ts}\right)ds
=\int_0^\infty\Sigma_te^{-\Sigma_ts}g(\vec{r}+s\hat{\Omega},E,\hat{\Omega})ds
and therefore hopefully
-\frac{d}{ds}\left(f(\vec{r}+s\hat{\Omega},E,\hat{\Omega})e^{-\Sigma_ts}\right)=\Sigma_te^{-\Sigma_ts}g(\vec{r}+s\hat{\Omega},E,\hat{\Omega})
Please help me! I'm finishing soon with my work and proving this (or at least having sufficient conditions) would be very welcome!
If
\int_0^\infty f(s)ds=\int_0^\infty g(s)ds
What are sufficient conditions such that f(s)=g(s)?
I know that two functions f(s),g(s) are equal if their domain, call it S, is equal and if f(s)=g(s) for all s\in S but I can't figure this one out.
The full problem is actually
-\int_0^\infty\frac{d}{ds}\left(f(\vec{r}+s\hat{\Omega},E,\hat{\Omega})e^{-\Sigma_ts}\right)ds
=\int_0^\infty\Sigma_te^{-\Sigma_ts}g(\vec{r}+s\hat{\Omega},E,\hat{\Omega})ds
and therefore hopefully
-\frac{d}{ds}\left(f(\vec{r}+s\hat{\Omega},E,\hat{\Omega})e^{-\Sigma_ts}\right)=\Sigma_te^{-\Sigma_ts}g(\vec{r}+s\hat{\Omega},E,\hat{\Omega})
Please help me! I'm finishing soon with my work and proving this (or at least having sufficient conditions) would be very welcome!