NSX Posted May 25, 2003 Posted May 25, 2003 Can someone clarify or explain what the Fourier Series is? From what I understand, its a way in which periodic funx can be expressed as a sine & cosine funxs together; However, seeing as how my knowledge in Calculus is limited to Grade School Advanced Functions & Introductory Calculus, I'm just like when I see sites like http://www.nst.ing.tu-bs.de/schaukasten/fourier/en_idx.html#DIRI & http://mathworld.wolfram.com/FourierSeries.html
JaKiri Posted May 25, 2003 Posted May 25, 2003 That's really all there is to it. Aside from that, there's just a lot of maths.
NSX Posted May 25, 2003 Author Posted May 25, 2003 Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri Aside from that, there's just a lot of maths. hm...I don't get those parts..hehe At what point do you learn those trig. integral identities? Or integration even?
Tom Mattson Posted May 25, 2003 Posted May 25, 2003 Originally posted by NSX Can someone clarify or explain what the Fourier Series is? From what I understand, its a way in which periodic funx can be expressed as a sine & cosine funxs together; Yes; the thing is that, in general, you need an infinite number of sines and cosines to represent the function. That is why you see the infinite sums. However, seeing as how my knowledge in Calculus is limited to Grade School Advanced Functions & Introductory Calculus, I'm just like when I see sites like http://www.nst.ing.tu-bs.de/schaukasten/fourier/en_idx.html#DIRI & http://mathworld.wolfram.com/FourierSeries.html [/b] There is really nothing on those websites that is beyond basic calculus and trigonometry, so with some instruction and study you should be able to get it. What specifically is giving you trouble? At what point do you learn those trig. integral identities? Or integration even? You learn the first in trigonometry, the second in calculus.
NSX Posted May 26, 2003 Author Posted May 26, 2003 Originally posted by Tom There is really nothing on those websites that is beyond basic calculus and trigonometry, so with some instruction and study you should be able to get it. What specifically is giving you trouble? I haven't learned integration yet; care to teach me? But I was just thinking, if you have an infinite number of sine & cosine funxs, wouldn't they just nullify each other causing 0 amplitude? Or am I missing something here?
JaKiri Posted May 26, 2003 Posted May 26, 2003 Originally posted by NSX But I was just thinking, if you have an infinite number of sine & cosine funxs, wouldn't they just nullify each other causing 0 amplitude? Or am I missing something here? Of different amplitudes and positions. Such as sin(x) + sin(x+15). As to the integration, basically :int:ax^n dx = (ax^n+1) / (n+1) + c. It gets a lot more complicated than that, but that's the basic idea.
NSX Posted May 26, 2003 Author Posted May 26, 2003 Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri As to the integration, basically :int:ax^n dx = (ax^n+1) / (n+1) + c. It gets a lot more complicated than that, but that's the basic idea. ooh...I gotta jot it down. hehe Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri Of different amplitudes and positions. Such as sin(x) + sin(x+15). ooh...I see; cool thanks.
NSX Posted May 26, 2003 Author Posted May 26, 2003 Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri As to the integration, basically :int:ax^n dx = (ax^n+1) / (n+1) + c. So ax^n is your original funx. Is dx is the derivative of the original funx?
Bsun Posted May 26, 2003 Posted May 26, 2003 No offense man, but if you are still in Highschool geometry right now(as i read in another of your posts) that stuff is going to probably be outside your comprehension for a while. I'm in calculus 3 and can't even remotely follow what they are talking about doing(a 50 step proof?!?). I think most people will never get to math like that, unless they are physics or math majors.
NSX Posted May 26, 2003 Author Posted May 26, 2003 Originally posted by Bsun No offense man, but if you are still in Highschool geometry right now(as i read in another of your posts) that stuff is going to probably be outside your comprehension for a while. I'm in calculus 3 and can't even remotely follow what they are talking about doing(a 50 step proof?!?). I think most people will never get to math like that, unless they are physics or math majors. Well, I'm going into that; and its just a interest right now; like, dave helped me to prove some of the other trig identities last time; but I'm still missing the link b/t Calculus & Geometry...
JaKiri Posted May 26, 2003 Posted May 26, 2003 Originally posted by NSX So ax^n is your original funx. Is dx is the derivative of the original funx? No, in all cases 'dx' means 'with respect to x', ie. in differenciation d(f(x))/dx means 'the differenciation of the function f(x) with respect to x', as opposed to dy or dz, say. d(f(x))/dy = 0, because f(x) doesn't change as y changes. It's just being precise what you mean.
NSX Posted May 27, 2003 Author Posted May 27, 2003 Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri No, in all cases 'dx' means 'with respect to x', ie. in differenciation d(f(x))/dx means 'the differenciation of the function f(x) with respect to x', as opposed to dy or dz, say. d(f(x))/dy = 0, because f(x) doesn't change as y changes. It's just being precise what you mean. That's cool; lots of practice with implicit differentiation helps...lol So with the original thingy; did you mean: :lint: d(ax^n)/dx ?
JaKiri Posted May 27, 2003 Posted May 27, 2003 No. [edit] y = x^2 dy/dx = 2x 1 dy = 2x dx :int: 1 dy = :int: 2x dx y = x^2 + c c = 0 in this case. :int: d(f(x))/dx doesn't mean anything, as there's only one dx command, which goes with the differentiation. :int: f'(x) has no meaning; how can you integrate the rate of change of something when you haven't got a variable that's changing?
NSX Posted May 28, 2003 Author Posted May 28, 2003 Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri No. [edit] y = x^2 dy/dx = 2x 1 dy = 2x dx :int: 1 dy = :int: 2x dx ooh!!! I never thought of that!
JaKiri Posted May 28, 2003 Posted May 28, 2003 Originally posted by NSX ooh!!! I never thought of that! It's a bit of a cheat
NSX Posted May 28, 2003 Author Posted May 28, 2003 Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri No. [edit] y = x^2 dy/dx = 2x 1 dy = 2x dx :int: 1 dy = :int: 2x dx || \/ y = x^2 + c c = 0 in this case. How'd you go from that step to the other? edit: You'll have to excuse my cheesed arrow there. =)
JaKiri Posted May 28, 2003 Posted May 28, 2003 Originally posted by MrL_JaKiri :int:ax^n dx = (ax^n+1) / (n+1) + c. Apply that to both sides (replacing x's with y's for the :int:dy ofc) (remember that y^0 = 1)
NSX Posted September 14, 2003 Author Posted September 14, 2003 Are there second integrals as well? I mean, dy^2 / d^2x is the second derivative of y=f(x)
Dave Posted September 16, 2003 Posted September 16, 2003 You can integrate things twice if you want to. Not much point most of the time unless you're doing second order differential equations, but those are mostly solved from specific guidelines already laid out.
NSX Posted September 17, 2003 Author Posted September 17, 2003 dave said in post #19 :You can integrate things twice if you want to. Not much point most of the time unless you're doing second order differential equations, but those are mostly solved from specific guidelines already laid out. What exactly are differential eq'ns[/i]. I've been meaning to ask my phys teacher, since that's where we've been applying it, but haven't got around to it since I wanted to look it up a bit first; but other courses have been...lagging my intuition
JaKiri Posted September 17, 2003 Posted September 17, 2003 A differential equation is an equation which has a differential in it.
Dave Posted September 17, 2003 Posted September 17, 2003 Well, that kindof sums it up bluntly, but yes e.g. x dy/dx = y
NSX Posted September 18, 2003 Author Posted September 18, 2003 Cool, thanks; I was reading some stuff on Worlfram @ school earlier on in the day, and that stuff ahd me worried.
Dave Posted September 18, 2003 Posted September 18, 2003 The trouble with wolfram is that it's all highly technical. I shouldn't worry too much about it if you don't have a solid foundation in mathematics.
bloodhound Posted April 16, 2004 Posted April 16, 2004 i havent done fourier series but i have read up a lil about it. if i understand correctly then. all it says is that any periodic fucntion (cant remember what the period must be . 2pi or something or other) can be written as a linear combination of sums of sine and sums of cosines.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now