- #1
Wiemster
- 72
- 0
For a magnetostatics problem I seek the solution to the following equation
[tex] \frac{1}{x}\frac{d}{dx} \left( x \frac{dy(x)}{dx} \right) = -C^2 y(x) [/tex]
(C a real constant) or equivalently
[tex]x \frac{d^2 y(x)}{dx^2} + \frac{dy(x)}{dx} + C^2 x y(x)=0[/tex]
It seems so simple, but finding a particular solution beats me...is this solvable?
[tex] \frac{1}{x}\frac{d}{dx} \left( x \frac{dy(x)}{dx} \right) = -C^2 y(x) [/tex]
(C a real constant) or equivalently
[tex]x \frac{d^2 y(x)}{dx^2} + \frac{dy(x)}{dx} + C^2 x y(x)=0[/tex]
It seems so simple, but finding a particular solution beats me...is this solvable?
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