What is the Role of Weight Functions in Solving Differential Equations?

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I've read a few books on solving differential equations and they all talk about inner products with respect to weight functions. The examples always read something like that "Using the weight function w(x) = blah blah show that the solutions of the differential equations are orthogonal"

We're always given the weight function. I was wondering if there was a general method to finding the weight function?
 
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Yes, there are ways to determine weight. For example, Vilenkin does that a couple of times in his Special functions and the theory of group representations.
 
id the sloth said:
I've read a few books on solving differential equations and they all talk about inner products with respect to weight functions. The examples always read something like that "Using the weight function w(x) = blah blah show that the solutions of the differential equations are orthogonal"

We're always given the weight function. I was wondering if there was a general method to finding the weight function?

Many of the common orthogonal families of functions are solutions to Sturm-Liouville boundary value problems. These are eigenvalue problems with associated boundary conditions, and orthogonality is a general property of the eigenfunctions. The weight function is one of the coefficients in the differential equation. That's where it comes from. You can read about it at

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturm–Liouville_theory
 
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