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ContentTheory of Equation
Theory of EquationThe Derived Functions of π(π₯)Rule for forming the derived functions 424 Multiply each term by the index of π₯, and reduce the index by one; that is, differentiate the function with respect to π₯.ExampleTake
π(π₯)=π₯5+π₯4+π₯3βπ₯2βπ₯β1
π1(π₯)=5π₯4+4π₯3+3π₯2β2π₯ β1
π2(π₯)=20π₯3+12π₯2+6π₯ β2
π3(π₯)=60π₯2+24π₯ +6
π4(π₯)=120π₯ +24
π5(π₯)=120
π1(π₯), π2(π₯), β― are called the first, second, β― derived functions of π(π₯).
425
To form the equation whose roots differ from those of π(π₯) by a quantity π.Put π₯=π¦+π in π(π₯), and expand each term by the Binomial Theorem, arranging the results in vertical columns in the following manner: π(π+π¦)= (π+π¦)5+(π+π¦)4+(π+π¦)3β(π+π¦)2β(π+π¦)β1
= π5+π4+π3βπ2βπβ1
+( 5π4+4π3+3π2β2πβ1 )π¦
+( 10π3+6π2+3πβ1 )π¦2
+( 10π2+4π+1 )π¦3
+( 5π+1 )π¦4
+ π¦5
426
Comparing this result with that seen in (424), it is seen that
π(π+π¦)=π(π)+π1(π)π¦+π2(π)π¦2+ π3(π)π¦3+ π4(π)π¦4+ π5(π)π¦5 so that the coefficient generally of π¦π in the transformed equation is ππ(π). 427 To form the equation most expeditionsly when π has a numerical value, divide π(π₯) continuously by π₯βπ, and the successive remainders will furnish the coefficients. ExampleTo expand π(π¦+2) when, as in (425), π(π₯)=π₯5+π₯4+π₯3βπ₯2βπ₯β1 Divide repeatedly by π₯β2, as follows:-
1+1+1β1β1β1
2 +2+6+14+26+50
1+3+7+13+25+49=π(2)
2 +2+10+34+94
1+5+17+47+119 =π1(2)
2 +2+14+62
1+7+31+109 =
That these remainders are the required coefficients is seen by inspecting the form of the equation (426); for if that equation be divided by π₯βπ=π¦ repeatedly, these remainders are obviously produced when π=2.Thus the equation, whose roots are each less by 2 than the roots of the proposed equation, is π¦5+11π¦4+49π¦3+109π¦2+119π¦+49=0. 428 To make any assigned term vanish in the transformed equation, π must be so determined that the coefficient of that term shall vanish. ExampleIn order that there may be no term involving π¦4 in equation (426), we must have π4(π)=0. Find π4(π) as in (424); thus 120π+24=0; β΄π=β15The equation in (424) must now be divided repeatedly by π₯+ 15after the manner of (427), and the resulting equation will be minus its second term. 429 Note, that to remove the second term of the equation π(π₯)=0, the requisite value of π is =β π1ππ0; that is, the coefficient of the second term, with the sign changed, divided by the coefficient of the first term, and by the number expressing the degree of the equation. 430 To transform π(π₯) into an equation in π¦ so that π¦=π(π₯), a given function of π₯, put π₯=πβ1(π¦), the inverse function of π¦. ExampleTo obtain an equation whose roots are respectively three times the roots of the equation π₯3β6π₯+1=0. Here π¦=3π₯; therefore π₯=π¦3, and the equation becomes π¦327β 6π¦3+1=0, or π¦3β54π¦+27=0. 431 To transform π(π₯)=0 into an equation in which the coefficient of the first term shall be unity, and theother coefficients the least possible integers. ExampleTake the equation 288π₯3+240π₯2β176π₯β21=0 Divide by the coefficient of the first term, and reduce the fractions; the eqaution becomes π₯3+56π₯2β 1118π₯β 796=0 Substitute π¦π₯for π₯, and multiply by π; we get π¦3+ 5π6π¦2β 11π218π¦β 7π396=0 Next resolve the denominators into their prime factors, π¦3+ 5π2β 3π¦2β 11π22β 32π¦β 7π325β 3=0 The smallest value must now be assigned to π, which will suffice to make each coefficient an integer. This is easily seen by inspection to be 22β 3=12, and the resulting equation is π¦3+10π¦2β88π¦β126=0 the roots of which are connected with the roots of the original equation by the relation π¦=12π₯ Sources and Referenceshttps://archive.org/details/synopsis-of-elementary-results-in-pure-and-applied-mathematics-pdfdriveΒ©sideway ID: 210800006 Last Updated: 8/6/2021 Revision: 0 Ref: References
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