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MATH 311 Topics in Applied Mathematics Bessel Functions (Continued)

The document summarizes properties of Bessel functions including: 1) Bessel's differential equation and its solutions called Bessel functions of the first and second kind. 2) Asymptotics of Bessel functions at the origin and infinity. 3) Zeros of Bessel functions and their interlacing properties. 4) Use of Bessel functions to solve eigenvalue problems for the Laplacian operator in circular and sectoral domains.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views17 pages

MATH 311 Topics in Applied Mathematics Bessel Functions (Continued)

The document summarizes properties of Bessel functions including: 1) Bessel's differential equation and its solutions called Bessel functions of the first and second kind. 2) Asymptotics of Bessel functions at the origin and infinity. 3) Zeros of Bessel functions and their interlacing properties. 4) Use of Bessel functions to solve eigenvalue problems for the Laplacian operator in circular and sectoral domains.

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MATH 311

Topics in Applied Mathematics


Lecture 25:
Bessel functions (continued).
Bessel’s differential equation of order m ≥ 0:
d 2f
2 df
z 2
+ z + (z 2 − m2 )f = 0
dz dz
The equation is considered on the interval (0, ∞).
Solutions are called Bessel functions of order m.
Jm (z): Bessel function of the first kind,
Ym (z): Bessel function of the second kind.
The general Bessel function of order m is
f (z) = c1 Jm (z) + c2 Ym (z), where c1 , c2 are
constants.
Bessel functions of the 1st and 2nd kind
Asymptotics at the origin
Jm (z) is regular while Ym (z) has a singularity at 0.
As z → 0, we have for any integer m > 0
1 2m (m − 1)! −m
Jm (z) ∼ m z m , Ym (z) ∼ − z .
2 m! π
2
Also, J0 (z) ∼ 1, Y0 (z) ∼ log z.
π
To get the asymptotics for a noninteger m, we
replace m! by Γ(m + 1) and (m − 1)! by Γ(m).
Jm (z) is uniquely determined by this asymptotics
while Ym (z) is not.
Asymptotics at infinity

As z → ∞, we have
r
2  π mπ 
Jm (z) = cos z − − + O(z −1 ),
πz 4 2
r
2  π mπ 
Ym (z) = sin z − − + O(z −1 ).
πz 4 2

Both Jm (z) and Ym (z) are uniquely determined by


this asymptotics.
For m = 1/2, these are exact formulas.
Original definition by Bessel (only for integer m):
1 π
Z
Jm (z) = cos(z sin τ − mτ ) dτ
π 0
1 1
Z π Z π
= cos(z sin τ ) cos(mτ ) dτ + sin(z sin τ ) sin(mτ ) dτ .
π 0 π 0

The first integral is 0 for any odd m while the


second integral is 0 for any even m. It follows that
X∞
cos(z sin τ ) = J0 (z) + 2 J2n (z) cos(2nτ ),
n=1
X∞ 
sin(z sin τ ) = 2 J2n−1 (z) sin (2n − 1)τ .
n=1
Zeros of Bessel functions
Let 0 < jm,1 < jm,2 < . . . be zeros of Jm (z) and
0 < ym,1 < ym,2 < . . . be zeros of Ym (z).
′ ′
Let 0 ≤ jm,1 < jm,2 < . . . be zeros of Jm′ (z) and
′ ′
0 < ym,1 < ym,2 < . . . be zeros of Ym′ (z).
′ ′
(We let j0,1 = 0 while jm,1 > 0 if m > 0.)
Then the zeros are interlaced:
′ ′
m ≤ jm,1 < ym,1 < ym,1 < jm,1 <
′ ′
< jm,2 < ym,2 < ym,2 < jm,2 < . . .
Asymptotics of the nth zeros as n → ∞:

jm,n ≈ ym,n ∼ (n + 12 m − 34 )π,

ym,n ≈ jm,n ∼ (n + 21 m − 14 )π.
Dirichlet Laplacian in a circle
Eigenvalue problem:
∇2 φ + λφ = 0 in D = {(x, y ) : x 2 + y 2 ≤ R 2 },
φ|∂D = 0.
Separation of variables in polar coordinates:
φ(r , θ) = f (r )h(θ). Reduces the problem to two
one-dimensional eigenvalue problems:
r 2 f ′′ + rf ′ + (λr 2 − µ)f = 0, f (R) = 0, |f (0)| < ∞;
h′′ = −µh, h(−π) = h(π), h′ (−π) = h′ (π).
The latter problem has eigenvalues µm = m2 ,
m = 0, 1, 2, . . . , and eigenfunctions h0 = 1,
hm (θ) = cos mθ, h̃m (θ) = sin mθ, m ≥ 1.
The 1st intermediate eigenvalue problem:
r 2 f ′′ + rf ′ + (λr 2 − m2 )f = 0, f (R) = 0, |f (0)| < ∞.

New variable z = λ · r reduces the equation to
Bessel’s equation of order√m. Hence the√general
solution is f (r ) = c1 Jm ( λ r ) + c2 Ym ( λ r ),
where c1 , c2 are constants.
Singular condition |f (0)| < ∞√holds if c2 = 0.
Nonzero solution exists if Jm ( λ R) = 0.
Thus there are infinitely many eigenvalues λm,1 , λm,2 , . . . ,
p
where λm,n R = jm,n , i.e., λm,n = (jm,n /R)2 .
Associated eigenfunctions: fm,n (r ) = Jm (jm,n r /R).
The eigenfunctions fm,n (r ) = Jm (jm,n r /R) are
orthogonal relative to the inner product
Z R
hf , g ir = f (r ) g (r ) r dr .
0
Any piecewise continuous function g on [0, R] is
expanded into a Fourier-Bessel series
X∞  r hg , fm,n ir
g (r ) = cn Jm jm,n , cn = ,
n=1 R hfm,n , fm,n ir
that converges in the mean (with weight r ).
If g is piecewise smooth, then the series converges
at its points of continuity.
Eigenvalue problem:
∇2 φ + λφ = 0 in D = {(x, y ) : x 2 + y 2 ≤ R 2 },
φ|∂D = 0.

Eigenvalues: λm,n = (jm,n /R)2 , where


m = 0, 1, 2, . . . , n = 1, 2, . . . , and jm,n is the nth
positive zero of the Bessel function Jm .
Eigenfunctions: φ0,n (r , θ) = J0 (j0,n r /R).
For m ≥ 1, φm,n (r , θ) = Jm (jm,n r /R) cos mθ and
φ̃m,n (r , θ) = Jm (jm,n r /R) sin mθ.
Neumann Laplacian in a circle
Eigenvalue problem:
∇2 φ + λφ = 0 in D = {(x, y ) : x 2 + y 2 ≤ R 2 },
∂φ

∂n ∂D = 0.
Again, separation of variables in polar coordinates,
φ(r , θ) = f (r )h(θ), reduces the problem to two
one-dimensional eigenvalue problems:
r 2 f ′′ + rf ′ + (λr 2 − µ)f = 0, f ′ (R) = 0, |f (0)| < ∞;
h′′ = −µh, h(−π) = h(π), h′ (−π) = h′ (π).
The 2nd problem has eigenvalues µm = m2 ,
m = 0, 1, 2, . . . , and eigenfunctions h0 = 1,
hm (θ) = cos mθ, h̃m (θ) = sin mθ, m ≥ 1.
The 1st one-dimensional eigenvalue problem:
r 2 f ′′ + rf ′ + (λr 2 − m2 )f = 0, f ′ (R) = 0, |f (0)| < ∞.
For λ > 0, the √ general solution
√ of the equation is
f (r ) = c1 Jm ( λ r ) + c2 Ym ( λ r ), where c1 , c2 are
constants.
Singular condition |f (0)| < ∞√holds if c2 = 0.
Nonzero solution exists if Jm′ ( λ R) = 0.
Thus there are infinitely many eigenvalues λm,1 , λm,2 , . . . ,
′ ′
p
where λm,n R = jm,n , i.e., λm,n = (jm,n /R)2 .

Associated eigenfunctions: fm,n (r ) = Jm (jm,n r /R).
λ = 0 is an eigenvalue only for m = 0.
Eigenvalue problem:
∇2 φ + λφ = 0 in D = {(x, y ) : x 2 + y 2 ≤ R 2 },
∂φ
= 0.
∂n ∂D

Eigenvalues: λm,n = (jm,n /R)2 , where

m = 0, 1, 2, . . . , n = 1, 2, . . . , and jm,n is the nth
′ ′
positive zero of Jm (exception: j0,1 = 0).

Eigenfunctions: φ0,n (r , θ) = J0 (j0,n r /R).
In particular, φ0,1 = 1.

For m ≥ 1, φm,n (r , θ) = Jm (jm,n r /R) cos mθ and

φ̃m,n (r , θ) = Jm (jm,n r /R) sin mθ.
Laplacian in a circular sector
Eigenvalue problem:
∇2 φ + λφ = 0 in D = {(r , θ) : r < R, 0 < θ < L},
φ|∂D = 0.
Again, separation of variables in polar coordinates,
φ(r , θ) = f (r )h(θ), reduces the problem to two
one-dimensional eigenvalue problems:
r 2 f ′′ + rf ′ + (λr 2 − µ)f = 0, f (0) = f (R) = 0;
h′′ = −µh, h(0) = h(L) = 0.

The 2nd problem has eigenvalues µm = ( mπ 2


L ) ,
m = 1, 2, . . . , and eigenfunctions hm (θ) = sin mπθ
L .
The 1st one-dimensional eigenvalue problem:
r 2 f ′′ + rf ′ + (λr 2 − ν 2 )f = 0, f (0) = f (R) = 0.
Here ν 2 = µm . We may assume that λ > 0.
The general √ solution of the√equation is
f (r ) = c1 Jν ( λ r ) + c2 Yν ( λ r ), where c1 , c2 are
constants.
Boundary condition f (0) = 0√ holds if c2 = 0.
Nonzero solution exists if Jν ( λ R) = 0.
Thus there are infinitely many eigenvalues λm,1 , λm,2 , . . . ,
p
where λm,n R = jν,n , i.e., λm,n = (jν,n /R)2 .
Associated eigenfunctions: fm,n (r ) = Jν (jν,n r /R).
Note that ν = mπ/L.
Eigenvalue problem:
∇2 φ + λφ = 0 in D = {(r , θ) : r < R, 0 < θ < L},
φ|∂D = 0.

Eigenvalues: λm,n = (j mπ L ,n
/R)2 , where
m = 1, 2, . . . , n = 1, 2, . . . , and j mπ
L ,n
is the nth
positive zero of the Bessel function J mπ L
.
Eigenfunctions:
φm,n (r , θ) = J mπ
L
(j mπ
L ,n
· r /R) sin mπθ
L .

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