Question 11.2.7: Find two linearly independent solutions of y″ - xy′ - x²y = ...
Find two linearly independent solutions of
y″ – xy^{′} – x²y = 0. (15)
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We make the usual substitution of the power series y = \sum{c_{n} x^{n}}. This results in the equation
\sum\limits_{n=2}^{\infty}{n(n – 1)c_{n} x^{n-2}} – \sum\limits_{n=1}^{\infty}{n c_{n} x^{n}} – \sum\limits_{n=0}^{\infty}{c_{n} x^{n+2}} = 0.
We can start the second sum at n = 0 without changing anything else. To make each term include x^{n} in its general term, we shift the index of summation in the first sum by +2 (replacen with n+2), and we shift it by -2 in the third sum (replace n with n – 2). These shifts yield
\sum\limits_{n=0}^{\infty}{(n + 2)(n + 1)c_{n+2} x^{n}} – \sum\limits_{n=0}^{\infty}{n c_{n} x^{n}} – \sum\limits_{n=2}^{\infty}{c_{n-2} x^{n}} = 0
The common range of these three summations is n ≧ 2, so we must separate the terms corresponding to n = 0 and n = 1 in the first two sums before collecting coefficients of x^{n}. This gives
2c_{2} + 6c_{3}x – c_{1}x + \sum\limits_{n=2}^{\infty}{[(n + 2)(n + 1) c_{n+2} – nc_{n} – c_{n – 2} ]x^{n} }= 0.
The identity principle now implies that 2c_{2} = 0, that c_{3} = \frac{1}{6}c_{1}, and the three-term recurrence relation
c_{n+2} = \frac{nc_{n} + c_{n-2}}{(n + 2)(n + 1)} (16)
for n ≧ 2. In particular,
c_{4} = \frac{2c_{2} + c_{0}}{12}, c_{5} = \frac{3c_{3} + c_{1}}{20}, c_{6} = \frac{4c_{4} + c_{2}}{30},
c_{7} = \frac{5c_{5} + c_{3}}{42}, c_{8} = \frac{6c_{6} + c_{4}}{56}. (17)
Thus all values of c_{n} for n ≧ 4 are given in terms of the arbitrary constants c_{0} and c_{1} because c_{2} = 0 and c_{3} = \frac{1}{6} c_{1}. To get our first solution y_{1} of Eq. (15), we choose c_{0} = 1 and c_{1} = 0, so that c_{2} = c_{3} = 0. Then the formulas in (17) yield
c_{4} = \frac{1}{12}, c_{5} = 0, c_{6} = \frac{1}{90}, c_{7} = 0, c_{8} = \frac{3}{1120};
thus
y_{1}(x) = 1 + \frac{1}{12}x^{4} + \frac{1}{90}x^{6} + \frac{3}{1120}x^{8} + · · ·. (18)
Because c_{1} = c_{3} = 0, it is clear from Eq. (16) that this series contains only terms of even degree. To obtain a second linearly independent solution y_{2} of Eq. (15), we take c_{0} = 0 and c_{1} = 1, so that c_{2} = 0 and c_{3} = \frac{1}{6} . Then the formulas in (17) yield
c_{4} = 0, c_{5} = \frac{3}{40}, c_{6} = 0, c_{7} =\frac{13}{1008},
so that
y_{2}(x) = x + \frac{1}{6}x^{3} + \frac{3}{40}x^{5} + \frac{13}{1008}x^{7}+ · · ·. (19)
Because c_{0} = c_{2} = 0, it is clear from Eq. (16) that this series contains only terms of odd degree. The solutions y_{1}(x) and y_{2}(x) are linearly independent because y_{1}(0) = 1 and y^{′}_{1}(0) = 0, whereas y_{2}(0) = 0 and y^{′}_{2}(0) = 1. A general solution of Eq. (15) is a linear combination of the power series in (18) and (19). Equation (15) has no singular points, so the power series representing y_{1}(x) and y_{2}(x) converge for all x.