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Solving The Radial Part of The Laplacian Equation Using The Method of Frobenius

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SOLVING THE RADIAL PART OF THE LAPLACIAN EQUATION USING THE

METHOD OF FROBENIUS

We begin with the equation:


x 2 y + 2 xy l (l + 1) y = 0

(1)

We recognize this as a differential equation that we can solve using the method of
Frobenius, so we use a trial solution of:

y = an x n+r

(2)

n=0

and substitute into (1). Doing so we obtain:

(n + r )(n + r 1)a
n =0

x n + r + 2 (n + r )a n x n + r l (l + 1) a n x n + r = 0 (3)
n =0

n =0

We first establish the indicial equation which will determine for us the values of r for this
equation that will appear in the solution expressed in (2). We find the indicial equation
by setting n to zero in all the sums of (3) that bear the lowest exponent of x. Since all the
sums in (3) are to the same power of x (i.e, xn+r), all the sums contribute to the indicial
equation and we obtain:
r (r 1) + 2r l (l + 1) = 0 r 2 + r (l 2 + l ) = (r 2 l 2 ) + (r l ) = (r l )(r + l + 1) = 0
r = l; l 1
Thus, the solutions to the indicial equation are l and (l+1).
We next find the recursion relation. Note that since all the sums already involve the same
exponent of x, there is no need to do any re-indexing. That means that all the coefficients
will remain expressed as an , and so we can write immediately:

[(n + r )(n + r 1) + 2(n + r ) l (l + 1)]a n = 0

(4)

Eq. (4) tells us that either the bracketed expression vanishes or the value of an vanishes.
We know that the method of Frobenius produces a series where the first non zero term is
a0, and we know that the bracketed expression vanishes for n=0; this is how we obtained
the indicial equation. However, for any other value of n, the bracketed expression cannot
vanish, meaning that an = 0 for all values of n > 1. This means the only term in the series
expansion is the a0 term, so our solution for eq. (1) becomes simply:
y = Ax l + Bx ( l +1)

(5)

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