More Zeros of Bessel Function Cross Products

More Zeros of Bessel Function Cross Products
Author: Henry E. Fettis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 72
Release: 1968
Genre: Bessel functions
ISBN:

The report contains tables of the first five roots of the following transcendental equations: (a) J sub 0 (alpha) Y sub 0 (kalpha) = Y sub 0 (alpha) J sub 0 (k alpha); (b) J sub 1 (alpha) Y sub 1 (k alpha) = Y sub 1 (alpha) J sub 1 (k alpha); (c) J sub 0 (alpha) Y sub 1 (k alpha) = Y sub 0 (alpha) J sub 1 (k alpha) where J sub 0 (alpha), Y sub 0 (alpha), J sub 1 (alpha), Y sub 1 (alpha) are Bessel functions of order 0 and 1 respectively. In these equations, alpha is the unknown and k is a parameter which may assume any positive value, other than 0 or 1. However, because of symmetry, it is sufficient in the first two cases to tabulate the roots only for 0

An Extended Table of Zeros of Cross Products of Bessel Functions

An Extended Table of Zeros of Cross Products of Bessel Functions
Author: Henry E. Fettis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 82
Release: 1966
Genre: Bessel functions
ISBN:

The report contains tables of the first five roots of the following transcendental equations: (a) J0(alpha) Y0(alpha) = Y0(alpha) J0(alpha); (b) J1(alpha) Y1(alpha) = Y1(alpha) J1(alpha); (c) J0(alpha) Y1(alpha) = Y0(alpha) J1(alpha) where J0(alpha), Y0(alpha), J1(alpha), Y1(alpha) are Bessel functions of order 0 and 1 respectively. In these equations, alpha is the unknown and k is a parameter which may assume any positive value, other than 0 or 1. Additional tables are included listing an auxiliary quantity gamma which is better suited to interpolation particularly when k is close to unity. (Author).

More Zeros of Bessel Function Cross Products

More Zeros of Bessel Function Cross Products
Author: Henry E. Fettis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 56
Release: 1968
Genre: Approximation theory
ISBN:

The report contains tables of the first five roots of the following transcendental equations: (a) J sub 0 (alpha) Y sub 0 (kalpha) = Y sub 0 (alpha) J sub 0 (k alpha); (b) J sub 1 (alpha) Y sub 1 (k alpha) = Y sub 1 (alpha) J sub 1 (k alpha); (c) J sub 0 (alpha) Y sub 1 (k alpha) = Y sub 0 (alpha) J sub 1 (k alpha) where J sub 0 (alpha), Y sub 0 (alpha), J sub 1 (alpha), Y sub 1 (alpha) are Bessel functions of order 0 and 1 respectively. In these equations, alpha is the unknown and k is a parameter which may assume any positive value, other than 0 or 1. However, because of symmetry, it is sufficient in the first two cases to tabulate the roots only for 0

Liquid Sloshing Dynamics

Liquid Sloshing Dynamics
Author: Raouf A. Ibrahim
Publisher:
Total Pages: 972
Release: 2005-09
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0511123647

This book deals with almost every aspect of liquid sloshing dynamics.

Computation and Control

Computation and Control
Author: Kenneth L. Bowers
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 407
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1461237041

The problem of developing a systematic approach to the design of feed back strategies capable of shaping the response of complicated dynamical control systems illustrates the integration of a wide variety of mathemat ical disciplines typical of the modern theory of systems and control. As a concrete example, one may consider the control of fluid flow across an airfoil, for which recent experiments indicate the possibility of delaying the onset of turbulence by controlling viscosity through thermal actuators located on the airfoil. In general, there are two approaches to the con trol of such a complica. ted process, the development of extremely detailed models of the process followed by the derivation of a more "dedicated" feed back law or the development of a more simple model class followed by the derivation of control laws which are more robust to unmodelled dynamics and exogeneous disturbances. In either approach, the two twin themes of approximation and computation play a significant role in the derivation and implementation of resulting control laws. And there is no doubt that the cross-fertilization between these twin themes and control theory will increase unabated throughout the next decade, not just as an important component of design and implementation of control laws but also as a source of new problems in computational mathematics. In this volume, we present a collection of papers which were deliv ered at the first Bozeman Conference on Computation and Control, held at Montana State University on August 1-11, 1988.