Euler Lagrange Equation - Frederic P Miller - Books - Alphascript Publishing - 9786130252854 - December 14, 2009
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

Euler Lagrange Equation

Price
S$ 225
excl. VAT

Ordered from remote warehouse

Expected delivery Jun 8 - 18
Add to your iMusic wish list

Publisher Marketing: High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! In calculus of variations, the Euler-Lagrange equation, or Lagrange's equation, is a differential equation whose solutions are the functions for which a given functional is stationary. It was developed by Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler and Italo-French mathematician Joseph Louis Lagrange in the 1750s. Because a differentiable functional is stationary at its local maxima and minima, the Euler-Lagrange equation is useful for solving optimization problems in which, given some functional, one seeks the function minimizing (or maximizing) it. This is analogous to Fermat's theorem in calculus, stating that where a differentiable function attains its local extrema, its derivative is zero. In Lagrangian mechanics, because of Hamilton's principle of stationary action, the evolution of a physical system is described by the solutions to the Euler-Lagrange equation for the action of the system. In classical mechanics, it is equivalent to Newton's laws of motion, but it has the advantage that it takes the same form in any system of generalized coordinates, and it is better suited to generalizations (see, for example, the "Field theory" section below).

Media Books     Book
Released December 14, 2009
ISBN13 9786130252854
Publishers Alphascript Publishing
Pages 168
Dimensions 229 × 152 × 10 mm   ·   268 g

More by Frederic P Miller

Show all