Solve A(x) ∆F[f]/∆f + J(x)F[f] = 0

Karlisbad
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Differential equation??

Let be F a functional of f(x) and J(x) and A(x) a function, then can we solve this?:

A(x)\frac{\delta F[f]}{\delta f}+J(x)F[f]=0

J and A are known functions and F[f] is an unknown functional satisfying the equation above.:confused: :confused:
 
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does f have to depend on x?
 
and are you sure you don't mean F(x)? becaue then all you need to do is substitute in a series solution.
 
F is a functional (a function of function :-p ) you introduce any function f(x) inside F and you get a number.. if F were a function i would know how to solve it...:redface:
 
Are there any good visualization tutorials, written or video, that show graphically how separation of variables works? I particularly have the time-independent Schrodinger Equation in mind. There are hundreds of demonstrations out there which essentially distill to copies of one another. However I am trying to visualize in my mind how this process looks graphically - for example plotting t on one axis and x on the other for f(x,t). I have seen other good visual representations of...
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