- #1
Saraphim
- 47
- 0
Homework Statement
Given a complex function
[tex]\tilde{f}(\mathbf{r},t)=Aexp(i(b(x+y)-wt+d))[/tex]
I am asked to determine for what value of b this satisfies the three-dimensional wave equation. x and y are components of r.
Homework Equations
3d wave equation:
[tex]\nabla^2 f=\frac{1}{v^2} \frac{d^2 f}{dt^2}[/tex]
The Attempt at a Solution
I take [tex]f=Re(\tilde{f})=Acos(b(x+y)-wt+d)[/tex] then write up the three-dimensional wave equation
[tex]\nabla^2 f=\frac{1}{v^2} \frac{d^2 f}{dt^2}[/tex]
[tex]-2Ab^2\cos(b(x+y)-wt+d)=-\frac{1}{v^2}w^2A\cos(b(x+y)-wt+d)[/tex]
Now, it is simply a matter of isolating b in the final equation. Is this correct?
I get [tex]b=\frac{w}{v \sqrt{2}}[/tex]
If this is correct, could I have reached this conclusion in an easier manner? I have this nagging feeling I'm missing out on all kind of complex goodness by just going to real parts immediately.
EDIT EDIT: Total nonsense answer before, sorry. Dunno how I missed that minus.
Last edited: