Solving (quadratic) equations of iterated functions, such as f(f(x))=f(x)+x

devojciq5o

devojciq5o

Answered question

2022-04-20

Solving (quadratic) equations of iterated functions, such as
f(f(x))=f(x)+x

Answer & Explanation

Cristian Rosales

Cristian Rosales

Beginner2022-04-21Added 26 answers

Step 1
In fact this belongs to a functional equation of the form
{x=u(t)f=u(t+1)
Then u(t+2)=u(t+1)+u(t)
u(t+2)u(t+1)u(t)=0
u(t)=C1(t)(1+52)t+C2(t)(152)t,
where C1(t) and C2(t) are arbitrary periodic functions with unit period
{x=C1(t)(1+52)t+C2(t)(152)tf=C1(t)(1+52)t+1+C2(t)(152)t+1
and C2(t) are arbitrary periodic functions with unit period
Ann Mathis

Ann Mathis

Beginner2022-04-22Added 11 answers

Step 1
Assume f is a linear transformation, then linear algebra lets us give it a matrix representation
f(x)=F×x
It is also the case that fg=FG, function composition is represented by matrix multiplication.
In your derivation you do not make any distinction between f and F, this is fine as long as you know you are doing it. Also the matrix F is 1×1 because R is a 1-dimensional vector space.
That is why we have:
f(f(x))=f(x)+x

F2=F+I

φ2=φ+1
(Where f(x)=Fx=φx
The only problem is that we cannot be sure f is a linear transform just based on what was told. So it is not known whether this gives all solutions.

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