| Tired of seeing ads? Click here to upgrade to Elite Membership! |
Mathematics Forum
|
| Author | Message / Information |
| germana2006 Quote | Reply | | Inverse Laplace Transformation posted on: 11/28/2006 3:54:58 PM Help me please with the next inverse Laplace transformation from P(s,t) to p(y,t): P(s,t)= p(s,0)Exp[At+1/3*Bt^3+1/2*Cist^2+Fts^2] Thank you very much for your help |
|
Euler
Quote | Reply | |
Inverse Laplace Transformation
replied on: 12/9/2006 12:08:30 PM Sorry, I can't understand your notation. What are "Cis" and "Fts"?? Once I know this I might be able to help. I can say, though, that typically when you are doing an inverse Laplace-transform on an e^at of some kind, you end up with the u_a(t) function, which is 1 for t>a, and 0 for t<=a. This is basically a translation of the delta distribution. Anyways, if you clear up those notations for me, I can help! |
|
LinkBot
|
Gamers Wanted is looking for people to write game reviews and post news, |
|
|
| Tired of seeing ads? Click here to upgrade to Elite Membership! |
ChatArea.com Help & News Forums | Terms of Use | Contact ChatArea.com | Advertising
Powered By ChatArea.com - Get your free Society today! © Copyright 2003 Wewp!