Difference between revisions of "Derivative of delta cosine"

From timescalewiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Proof)
Line 10: Line 10:
 
&= \dfrac{ip}{2} (e_{ip}-e_{-ip}(t,t_0)) \\
 
&= \dfrac{ip}{2} (e_{ip}-e_{-ip}(t,t_0)) \\
 
&= -\dfrac{p}{2i} (e_{ip}-e_{-ip}(t,t_0)) \\
 
&= -\dfrac{p}{2i} (e_{ip}-e_{-ip}(t,t_0)) \\
&= -\sin_p(t,t_0)
+
&= -\sin_p(t,t_0),
 
\end{array}$$
 
\end{array}$$
as was to be shown. █  
+
as was to be shown. █
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 01:49, 6 February 2023

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\cos_p^{\Delta}(t,t_0)=-p(t)\sin_p(t,t_0),$$ where $\cos_p$ denotes the $\Delta$-$\cos_p$ function and $\sin_p$ denotes the $\Delta$-$\sin_p$ function.

Proof

Compute $$\begin{array}{ll} \cos_p^{\Delta}(t,t_0) &= \dfrac{1}{2} \dfrac{\Delta}{\Delta t} (e_{ip}(t,t_0) + e_{-ip}(t,t_0) \\ &= \dfrac{ip}{2} (e_{ip}-e_{-ip}(t,t_0)) \\ &= -\dfrac{p}{2i} (e_{ip}-e_{-ip}(t,t_0)) \\ &= -\sin_p(t,t_0), \end{array}$$ as was to be shown. █

References