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Completeness of the Set of Eigenfunctions via Rayleigh's
Quotient
The fact that eigenvalues of the regular Sturm-Liouville problem form a
semi-unbounded sequence, i.e., that
is very important. It implies that the set of eigenfunctions of the
Sturm-Liouville problem
 |
(327) |
with
is a generalized Fourier basis. In other words, they form a complete
basis set for the subspace of
of those square-integrable
functions which satisfy the given boundary conditions, Eq.(3.27). This subspace is
Recall that a set
is said to be
complete, if for any vector
, the error vector
can be made to have arbitrarily small squared norm by letting
,
i.e.,
Here
is the
th (generalized) Fourier coefficient with the consequence
that
is
perpendicular to the subspace
Figure 3.14:
The
-dimensional subspace spanned by the eigenfunctions
causes the Hilbert space
to be
decomposed into the direct sum consisting of
and the space
, which is spanned by the remaining basis vectors
.
 |
The subspace
induces
to be decomposed into the direct sum
Here
(``
perp'') is the subspace of all vectors perpendicular
to
In other words,
is the space of all vectors satisfying the set
of constraint conditions
Our starting point for demonstrating the completeness is the Rayleigh
principle. It says that the Rayleigh quotient
satisfies various minimum principles when
is restricted to lie on various
subspaces
,
. Indeed, one has
i.e., for any
subject to the constraint
.
More generally, the
st eigenvalue
is characterized by
i.e., for any
subject to the constraints
The
th error vector
satisfies the constraint conditions
Consequently, it satisfies the corresponding Rayleigh inequality
or
We insert the expression for
into the left hand side, and obtain
The orthonormality of eigenfunctions and the definition of the generalized
Fourier coefficients guarantee that the last two sums cancel. Furthermore, by
doing an integration by parts twice, and by observing that the resulting end
point terms vanish because of the Dirichlet-Neumann boundary conditions,
Eq. 3.27, we obtain
As a consequence the Rayleigh inequality becomes
Without loss of generality one may assume that the lowest eigenvalue
. This can always be made to come about by readjusting the
and the function
in the Sturm-Liouville equation. As a result, the
finite sum may be dropped without decreasing the
Consequently,
The numerator is independent of
. Thus
because
is an unbounded sequence. Thus we
have
The function
is an arbitrary square integrable function satisfying the
the given mixed Dirichlet-Neuman end point conditions. Consequently,
the Sturm-Liouville eigenfunctions form a (complete) generalized Fourier
basis indeed.
[references_for_chapter3]
[plain]
Next: Green's Function Theory
Up: Sturm-Liouville Theory
Previous: Discrete Unbounded Sequence of
Contents
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Ulrich Gerlach
2007-04-05