Talk:Sturm-Liouville theory
Numbered equations
Hi Daniel,
I had to transform the templates provided in the WP article for numbered equations into plain old wikimarkup. I attempted to bring these templates over from WP, but they called many other templates and when I got them all over, the combined result didn't work. I decided to use a simple bit of html that defined a span with right justification and also defined an anchor. To reference the equation you then only need to insert a mediawiki markup referencing the anchor. It wouldn't be hard to turn this all into two templates if you think that would be useful. Dan Nessett 19:28, 2 September 2009 (UTC)
Redacted comment. I see it now.
Error
It seems to me that the article contains an error. Consider the definition:
Contrary to what is implied in the article, the operator L thus defined is not self-adjoint, unless 1/w(x) commutes with the operator to its right. This is in general not the case. The proper way to transform is (L in the next equation is w(x) times L in the previous equation):
- Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle L u = \lambda\, w\;u\; \Longrightarrow\; w^{-1/2} L w^{-1/2} w^{1/2} u = \lambda\, w^{1/2} u \; \Longrightarrow\; \tilde{L}\,\tilde{u} = \lambda\,\tilde{u} }
with
- Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle \tilde{L} \equiv w^{-1/2} L w^{-1/2} \quad\hbox{and}\quad \tilde{u} \equiv w^{1/2} u }
Since w(x) is positive-definite w(x)−½ is well-defined and real. The operator is self-adjoint.
--Paul Wormer 08:09, 14 October 2009 (UTC)