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Next: Exponential Functions Up: ``Solving'' the Motion Previous: Canonical Variables

Differential Equations

What we are doing when we ``solve the equation of motion'' is looking for a ``solution'' [in the sense defined above] to the differential equation defined by Eq. (7). You may have heard horror stories about the difficulty of ``solving differential equations,'' but it's really no big deal; like long division, basically you can only use a trial-and-error method: does this function have the right derivative? No? How about this one? And so on. Obviously, you can quickly learn to recognize certain functions by their derivatives; more complicated ones are harder, and it doesn't take much to stump even a seasoned veteran. The point of all this is that ``solving differential equations'' is a difficult and arcane art only if you want to be able to solve any differential equation; solving the few simple ones that occur over and over in physics is no more tedious than remembering multiplication tables. Some of the other commonly-occuring examples have already been mentioned.



Jess H. Brewer
1998-10-08