I have the following system: dot x=-y, dot y=x Given that (x^n_i,y^n_i) are the points obtained for i=1,2…n^2 using a time-step h=1/n starting at the initial point (x_0,y_0)=(1,0).

musicintimeln

musicintimeln

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2022-08-18

I have the following system:
x ˙ = y y ˙ = x
Given that ( x i n , y i n ) are the points obtained for i = 1 , 2 n 2 using a time-step h = 1 / n starting at the initial point ( x 0 , y 0 ) = ( 1 , 0 ).
I am struggling to find the following limit:
lim n ( x n n , y n n )
I can intutively think of the above limit ending up somewhere on the unit circle but I am unable to obtain the value of the exact limit. Pardon if its too simple, but I am surely missing out something. Please help out, thanks in advance.

Answer & Explanation

Rowan Dyer

Rowan Dyer

Beginner2022-08-19Added 14 answers

Transform x 1 , y 1 to polar coordinates r , θ. Show then using trigonometric identities that
x n = r n cos ( n θ ) ,     y n = r n sin ( n θ ) .
Show that r = 1 + O ( h 2 ) and θ = h + O ( h 2 ) and draw conclusions for the case n h = 1.

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