What is the Integral Solution for a Calculus Problem with Two Variables?

eas123
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Homework Statement



See attached.

Homework Equations




The Attempt at a Solution



I integrated the equation with respect to x to obtain
∫\frac{d}{dx}(xe^{-x}\frac{df}{dx})dx+∫ne^{-x}fdx= constant
The first term on the left hand side goes to zero as x, df/dx are bounded at 0, infinity. This leaves the expression ∫ne^{-x}fdx= constant which is not the one given.
 

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hi eas123! :smile:

what happened to m ? :confused:
 
Hi. :-)

What do you mean? I don't know how to derive the expression.
 
your expected answer, ##\int_0^{\infty} e^{-x}f_n(x)f_m(x) dx = 0##, has an "m" in it

i don't see an "m" in your actual work
 
So where have I gone wrong?
 
eas123 said:
So where have I gone wrong?

i'm completely confused :redface:

you seem to be solving a different problem :confused:

start with ##e^{-x}f_n(x)f_m(x) dx = 0##, and integrate it :smile:
 
eas123 said:

Homework Statement



See attached.

Homework Equations




The Attempt at a Solution



I integrated the equation with respect to x to obtain
∫\frac{d}{dx}(xe^{-x}\frac{df}{dx})dx+∫ne^{-x}fdx= constant
The first term on the left hand side goes to zero as x, df/dx are bounded at 0, infinity. This leaves the expression ∫ne^{-x}fdx= constant which is not the one given.
The following is an image of the attachment. Please notice that the result you are to prove contains both n and m . That's what tiny-tim is telling you.

attachment.php?attachmentid=58464&d=1367661781.jpg
 
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