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MATHEMATICAL METHODS I

PHYS 508, Fall 2016


9:30 to 10:50 Monday, Wednesday, Room 136 Loomis Laboratory.
This web-page contains links to documents such as handouts and other useful stuff.
These files are now only in PDF (.pdf) format.
Syllabus Outline
The course covers four related areas:
Calculus of Variations. Equations of mathematical physics as variational
problems, conservation laws, Lagrange multipliers, origin of eigenproblems,
variational approximation schemes.
Ordinary differential equations. Linear equations: Solution space, linear
independence, Wronskians, normal forms. Eigenvalue problems: importance of
boundary conditions, formal and true self-adjointness, completeness of
eigenfunctions, Fourier series, continuous spectra and Fourier integrals. Green
Functions: Range-nullspace theorem, Fredholm alternative, constructing Green
functions via jump conditions.
Partial Differential equations. Classification of PDE's. Hyperbolic equations:
wave equation, method of characteristics, shocks and weak solutions. Heat
equation: solution by integral transforms. Elliptic equations: Dirichlet and
Neumann problems, Poisson's equation, Legendre functions, spherical
harmonics, Bessel and spherical Bessel functions, examples from electrostatics.
Integral Equations. Type I and type II Fredholm and Volterra equations,
solution via Fourier and Laplace transforms, Abel's equation. Separable
Kernels: compact and Hilbert-Schmidt operators, Fredholm alternative again.
Perturbation methods: Neumann and Fredholm series.
Homework Sets
There are 11 weekly homework sets that will count towards the final grade, and one
end-of-term set of optional problems. Your solutions sets must be deposited in the
Phys 508 homework box before 5pm on the due date, which will always be a Monday.

Homework number 1, due Monday Aug 29th.


Solutions 1
Homework number 2, due Tuesday Sept 06th.
Solutions 2
Homework number 3, due Monday Sept 12th.
Solutions 3
Homework number 4, due Monday Sep 26th.
Solutions 4
Homework number 5, due Monday Oct 03rd.
Solutions 5
Homework number 6, due Monday Oct 10th.
Solutions 6
Homework number 7, due Monday Oct 17th.
Solutions 7
Homework number 8, due Monday Oct 24th.
Solutions 8
Homework number 9, due Monday Nov 14th.
Solutions 9
Homework number 10, due Monday Nov 28th.
Solutions 10
Homework number 11 due Monday Dec 5th
Solutions 11
Homework number 12, Further optional problems.
Exams
The midterm will be in class on November 7th. It will cover everything up to the end
of chapter 5.
The Final Exam will be on Friday 16th Dec from 8am to 11am. It will be in our usual
room 136LLP. It will cover everything.

Some old exams for you to review:


Midterm Exam, Fall 2013
Final Exam, Fall 2003
Final Exam, Fall 2014
Textbook
I recommend (but do not require) that you purchase Mathematics for Physics: A
guided tour for graduate students by myself and Paul Goldbart. (Cambridge
University Press 2009). The list price is $90, but Amazon has it for $74 (+shipping). I
do not yet know what the UI bookstore is selling it for. This book is an expanded
version of the lecture notes for both PHYS 508 and PHYS 509. Here is a list of typos
and outright errors that readers have found in the printed text.
As a cheaper alternative you can buy Mathematics for Physicists by Phillipe Dennery
and Andre Krzywicki (Dover Publications, $12.95) as an alternative textbook. It
covers a fair bit of the material in this course, and will be useful for the complexvariable part of PHYS 509.
A set of online lecture notes is still available for download, but, now that the book is
published, I am no longer maintaining them, so typos are not being corrected.
Grades and Gradebook
Registered students may access the on-line gradebook by using your university
username and password. You will need to accept cookies, and have JavaScript turned
on for the gradebook to work.
Your grade in the course will be determined as from your total scores weighted as
follows: Homework 50%, Midterm exam 20%, Final Exam 30%.
Cultural Enrichment Links
Some of the material in the course is supposed to introduce you to the wider culture of
mathematical physics and its applications in the real world. Here are links relating to
some of the topics discussed:

People A Short Biography of George Green can be found here. This site also
contains the biographies of many other mathematicians and mathematical
physicists.
Wave Phenomena A video of a tidal bore can be found here here. Images and
description of the Kelvin ship wake can be found here and here
Solitons A nonlinear pulse obeying the KdV equation does not form a shock,
but instead decays into solitions. Here is a movie of this phenomenon. It is
taken from the ``soliton lab'' created by Kanehisa Takasaki at the univerity of
Kyoto.
Staff
Finding me:
Office: 2117 ESB.
Phone: 3-2891.
e-mail: m-stone5@uiuc.edu
My office hour is Moday 8-9am, outside 2117 ESB (Tuesday on Sept 6th) .
Graders:
Vatsal Dwivedi
Office hour: Friday 1-2pm
Location: ESB third floor commons area
email: vdwivedi2@illinos.edu
Suoang Lu
Office hour: Sunday 4-5pm
Location: Loomis Interaction Room
email: slu35@illinois.edu
Last updated 06/06/2016

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