what if heat, but plate

\begin{equation} \pdv{u}{t} = \pdv[2]{u}{x} + \pdv[2]{u}{y} \end{equation}

For some heat distribution that has arbitrary shape, on some domain \Omega \times [0, \infty]_{t} (i.e. argumentation of some space dimensions by time). Dirichlet Conditions: edges have heat 0 OR Neumann Conditions: normal derivative (flux) is 0 at the edge If \Omega is a general blob, you are actually kinda fucked. Because the bounds on x depend on y, and y on x, so you can’t just separate them into a product. However, if we cut a rectangle, life is better. where:

\begin{equation} 0 \leq x \leq l_1 \end{equation}
\begin{equation} 0 \leq y \leq l_2 \end{equation}

where the Dirichlet condition is now described as the four line segments along the curve at l_1 and l_2 having constant (or vanishing) temperature. Its general solution is:

\begin{equation} u(t,x,y) = \sum_{n_1=1}^{\infty}\sum_{n_2=1}^{\infty} A_{n_1, n_2} e^{-\left(\left( \frac{{n_{1}}^{2}}{{l_{1}}^{2}}\right) + ( \frac{{n_{2}}^{2}}{{l_{2}}^{2}})\right) \pi^{2}t} \sin \left(\left(n_1 \frac{\pi}{l_{1}}\right)x \right)\sin \left(\left(n_2 \frac{\pi}{l_{2}}\right)y \right) \end{equation}

where:

\begin{equation} \lambda = \lambda_{1} + \lambda_{2} = - \left( \frac{{n_{1}}^{2}}{{l_1}^{2}} + \frac{{n_{2}}^{2}}{{l_2}^{2}}\right) \pi^{2} \end{equation}

solving \begin{equation} U(t,x,y) = A(t)B(x)C(y) \end{equation} So now with much prayer and plugging:

\begin{equation} A’(t) B(x) C(y) = A(t) B’’(X)C(y) + A(t)B(x)C’’(y) \end{equation}

which gives:

\begin{equation} \frac{A’(t)}{A(t)} = \frac{B’’(x)}{B(x)} + \frac{C’’(y)}{C(y)} = \lambda \end{equation}

Which causes two problems to arise:

\begin{equation} \begin{cases} A’(t) = \lambda A(t) = 0 \\ \frac{B’’(x)}{B(x)} + \frac{C’’(y)}{C(y)} = \lambda \end{cases} \end{equation}

the second expression gives:

\begin{equation} \frac{B’’(X)}{B(X)} = \lambda - \frac{C’’(y)}{C(y)} \end{equation}

Meaning:

\begin{equation} \frac{B’’(X)}{B(X)} = \lambda - \frac{C’’(y)}{C(y)} = \lambda_{1} \end{equation}

Meaning:

\begin{equation} B’’(x) - \lambda_{1} B(x) = 0 \end{equation}

and:

\begin{equation} C’’(y) - \lambda_{2} C = 0 \end{equation}

where \lambda - \lambda_{1} = \lambda_{2}. Now, recall our boundary conditions:

\begin{equation} B(0) = B(l_1) = 0 \end{equation}

and

\begin{equation} C(0) = C(\lambda_{2}) = 0 \end{equation}

So, for the expression in B, we obtain:

\begin{equation} \lambda_{1} = \frac{-k_{1}^{2}\pi^{2}}{l_{1}^{2}}} \end{equation}
\begin{equation} \lambda_{2} = \frac{-k_{2}^{2}\pi^{2}}{l_{2}^{2}}} \end{equation}

so:

\begin{equation} \lambda = \lambda_{1} + \lambda_{2} \end{equation}

All together, we obtain:

\begin{equation} B(x) = \sin \left( \frac{k_{1} \pi x}{l_{1}}\right) \end{equation}

and:

\begin{equation} C(y) = \sin \left( \frac{k_{2} \pi y}{l_{2}}\right) \end{equation}

finally, where:

\begin{equation} A’ + \left( \frac{k_{1}^{2} \pi^{2}}{ l_1^{2}} + \frac{k_{2}^{2} \pi^{2}}{ l_2^{2}}\right)A = 0 \end{equation}

which gives us:

\begin{equation} A(t) = e^{-\left( \frac{k_{1}^{2} \pi^{2}}{ l_1^{2}} + \frac{k_{2}^{2} \pi^{2}}{ l_2^{2}}\right)t} \end{equation}

so then multiply them together:

\begin{equation} \sum_{k_1}^{} \sum_{k_2}^{}E_{k_1, k_2} e^{-\left( \frac{k_{1}^{2} \pi^{2}}{ l_1^{2}} + \frac{k_{2}^{2} \pi^{2}}{ l_2^{2}}\right)t} \sin \left( \frac{k_{2} \pi y}{l_{2}}\right) \sin \left( \frac{k_{1} \pi x}{l_{1}}\right) \end{equation}

at u(0,x,y), we obtain:

\begin{equation} u(0,x,y) = \sum_{k_1}^{} \sum_{k_2}^{}E_{k_1, k_2} \sin \left( \frac{k_{2} \pi y}{l_{2}}\right) \sin \left( \frac{k_{1} \pi x}{l_{1}}\right) \end{equation}

for every f(x,y), we can solve for E_{k_1, k_2} by fixing y, for instance, then writing a Fourier series as a function that depends on the coefficients you left out. This gives:

\begin{equation} f(x,y) = \sum a_{k_1}(y) \sin \left( \frac{k_1 \pi x}{l_1}\right) \end{equation}

and then, each of THESE internal functions a function a_{k_1}(y) , which you can obtain over y and expand as a fourier series. To solve for each, you do the susual:

\begin{equation} a_{k_1}(y) = \frac{2}{l_1} \int_{0}^{l_1} f(x,y) \sin \left( \frac{k_1 \pi x}{l_1}\right) \dd{x} \end{equation}

which you can expand:

\begin{equation} E_{k_1, k_2} = \frac{2}{l_2} \int_{0}^{l_2} a_{k_1}(y) \sin \left( \frac{k_1 \pi y}{l_2}\right) \dd{y} \end{equation}

which means that, substituting it in, the whole thing can be written together as:

\begin{equation} E_{k_1, k_2} = \frac{2}{l_2} \int_{0}^{l_2} \frac{2}{l_1} \int_{0}^{l_1} f(x,y) \sin \left( \frac{k_1 \pi x}{l_1}\right) \dd{x} \sin \left( \frac{k_1 \pi y}{l_2}\right) \dd{y} \end{equation}
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