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of the book, a trig identity might be at fault.)
 
of the book, a trig identity might be at fault.)
  
Another way to solve this problem is to recognize that the given expression is the derivative of 1 / [(s+2)^2 + 1]].....therefore greatly simplifying the solution.   
+
** Another way to solve this problem is to recognize that the given expression is the derivative of 1 / [(s+2)^2 + 1]].....therefore greatly simplifying the solution.   
  
 
[[2010 MA 527 Bell|Back to the MA 527 start page]]  
 
[[2010 MA 527 Bell|Back to the MA 527 start page]]  

Revision as of 14:17, 18 October 2010

Homework 8 Collaboration Area

Question on problem 15 in Sec 6.6.

I tried to obtain the expression for

s/(s + 1) * 1/(s+1)

but am not getting the correct result in the Laplace table of

t sin t.

I am using the convolution of cos(tau)*sin(t-tau). There is no t term in sight. Is it okay to read off the table? Even if it is, shouldn't the result be the same?

Answer:

To find the inverse Laplace transform of

s/(s + 1) * 1/(s+1)

you'll need to compute the convolution integral:

$ \int_0^t \cos(\tau)\sin(t-\tau)\ d\tau. $

You'll have to use a formula for the sine of the difference of two angles and be very careful. Remember, t acts like a constant in the integrals.

There is only one correct answer, so you should get it that way. (If it looks different than the back of the book, a trig identity might be at fault.)

    • Another way to solve this problem is to recognize that the given expression is the derivative of 1 / [(s+2)^2 + 1]].....therefore greatly simplifying the solution.

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