king kyle Posted June 21, 2015 Posted June 21, 2015 I've stumbled upon a direct proof on Reddit, which uses differentiation to solve an equation. See https://medium.com/criminal-clouds/hydrostatic-lapse-part-1-of-3-e8a1534cd12d At particular point we reach this equation: This equation is then "logged" on both sides: then differentiated on both sides: then rearranged: then differentiated on both sides again and solved: Is this the correct way to solve this equation? I'm no maths expert, but this differentiation of both sides seems like far too much of a short cut.
mathematic Posted June 21, 2015 Posted June 21, 2015 No. Two expressions may be equal at one point, but the derivatives could be quite different. Simple example: f(x)=x, g(x)=x^2. f(x)=g(x) has two solutions, x=0 and x=1. f'(x)=1, g'(x)=2x. f'(x)=g'(x) has solution x=1/2. In your case, La=Lp is trivially obvious solution by inspection.
king kyle Posted June 22, 2015 Author Posted June 22, 2015 La=Lp seems obvious to me too, I just don't how you would actually go about solving this.
imatfaal Posted June 22, 2015 Posted June 22, 2015 La=Lp seems obvious to me too, I just don't how you would actually go about solving this. It is a brutal rearrangement leading to a huge right hand side involving logs and the product log function http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=%28a-bx%29%5Ey%3D%28a-by%29%5Ex Further to Mathematics excellent point - I would also note that derivatives can be the same whilst the functions are different y=x^2+x+c this is a infinite group of curves - yet they all have the same derivative. Think of it this way - the function includes the information of where the curve is at every point AND the slope - but the derivative only includes the slope; you lose information when you differentiate.
king kyle Posted June 24, 2015 Author Posted June 24, 2015 It is a brutal rearrangement leading to a huge right hand side involving logs and the product log function But isn't La=Lp ?
mathematic Posted June 24, 2015 Posted June 24, 2015 La=Lp seems obvious to me too, I just don't how you would actually go about solving this. It then becomes an identity.
king kyle Posted June 26, 2015 Author Posted June 26, 2015 It then becomes an identity. I'm not sure what your getting at here. I would of thought that there would be a way to solve La in terms of Lp. If you look at this spreadsheet you will see that if La = Lp then the top equality holds.
mathematic Posted June 27, 2015 Posted June 27, 2015 I'm not sure what your getting at here. I would of thought that there would be a way to solve La in terms of Lp. If you look at this spreadsheet you will see that if La = Lp then the top equality holds. I wan't trying to be profound. If La=Lp, both sides of the equation are the same symbolically - i,.e. identical.
Robittybob1 Posted June 27, 2015 Posted June 27, 2015 (edited) I'm not sure what your getting at here. I would of thought that there would be a way to solve La in terms of Lp. If you look at this spreadsheet you will see that if La = Lp then the top equality holds. on the spreadsheet E3 = D3 and then you are surprised that B6 = C6! They are calculating with the same values to start with aren't they! Edited June 27, 2015 by Robittybob1
imatfaal Posted June 27, 2015 Posted June 27, 2015 I'm not sure what your getting at here. I would of thought that there would be a way to solve La in terms of Lp. If you look at this spreadsheet you will see that if La = Lp then the top equality holds. An identity is different from an equations. Put simply an equation has a LHS and a RHS that are equal - we re-arrange to find out what values are solutions, or how one variable looks when shown as a combination of all the others. An identity (which is designated with a three bar equals sign) is just two ways of writing the same expression - ie both sides are always equal no matter what values the variables take. y = sin(x) is an equation sin2(x) [latex]\equiv[/latex] 1 - cos2(x) is an identity - no matter what value x takes the LHS equals the RHS The solution set to your initial question is large and complex - one single solution is that La=Lp but as Mathematic said this is trivial. The guy on Reddit is saying that La must equal Lp and drawing conclusions from an assertion that they must be equivalent. This is not the whole answer; the two sides of the equation balance when La=Lp, but also in an infinite number of other cases
king kyle Posted June 28, 2015 Author Posted June 28, 2015 This is not the whole answer; the two sides of the equation balance when La=Lp, but also in an infinite number of other cases Can you provide another solution that also allows the equality to work? I cannot get the left side result to match the right side result when La differs from Lp.
uncool Posted June 28, 2015 Posted June 28, 2015 Assuming L_a, L_p, and h are held constant while T_s changes, and this equation remains accurate, this "proof" is fine. In other words, think of both sides as functions of the time t; if the functions are equal during some period, then the derivatives will also be equal. It's a bit overkill, though; asymptotic behavior at infinite T_s should be enough...
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