Basic Algebra and Calculus¶
Sage can perform various computations related to basic algebra and calculus: for example, finding solutions to equations, differentiation, integration, and Laplace transforms. See the Sage Constructions documentation for more examples.
In all these examples, it is important to note that the variables in the
functions are defined to be var(...)
. As an example:
sage: u = var('u')
sage: diff(sin(u), u)
cos(u)
If you get a NameError
, check to see if you misspelled something,
or forgot to define a variable with var(...)
.
Solving Equations¶
Solving Equations Exactly¶
The solve
function solves equations. To use it, first specify
some variables; then the arguments to solve
are an equation (or a
system of equations), together with the variables for which to
solve:
sage: x = var('x')
sage: solve(x^2 + 3*x + 2, x)
[x == -2, x == -1]
You can solve equations for one variable in terms of others:
sage: x, b, c = var('x b c')
sage: solve([x^2 + b*x + c == 0],x)
[x == -1/2*b - 1/2*sqrt(b^2 - 4*c), x == -1/2*b + 1/2*sqrt(b^2 - 4*c)]
You can also solve for several variables:
sage: x, y = var('x, y')
sage: solve([x+y==6, x-y==4], x, y)
[[x == 5, y == 1]]
The following example of using Sage to solve a system of non-linear equations was provided by Jason Grout: first, we solve the system symbolically:
sage: var('x y p q')
(x, y, p, q)
sage: eq1 = p+q==9
sage: eq2 = q*y+p*x==-6
sage: eq3 = q*y^2+p*x^2==24
sage: solve([eq1,eq2,eq3,p==1],p,q,x,y)
[[p == 1, q == 8, x == -4/3*sqrt(10) - 2/3, y == 1/6*sqrt(10) - 2/3], [p == 1, q == 8, x == 4/3*sqrt(10) - 2/3, y == -1/6*sqrt(10) - 2/3]]
For numerical approximations of the solutions, you can instead use:
sage: solns = solve([eq1,eq2,eq3,p==1],p,q,x,y, solution_dict=True)
sage: [[s[p].n(30), s[q].n(30), s[x].n(30), s[y].n(30)] for s in solns]
[[1.0000000, 8.0000000, -4.8830369, -0.13962039],
[1.0000000, 8.0000000, 3.5497035, -1.1937129]]
(The function n
prints a numerical approximation, and the
argument is the number of bits of precision.)
Solving Equations Numerically¶
Often times, solve
will not be able to find an exact solution to
the equation or equations specified. When it fails, you can use
find_root
to find a numerical solution. For example, solve does
not return anything interesting for the following equation:
sage: theta = var('theta')
sage: solve(cos(theta)==sin(theta), theta)
[sin(theta) == cos(theta)]
On the other hand, we can use find_root
to find a solution to the
above equation in the range \(0 < \phi < \pi/2\):
sage: phi = var('phi')
sage: find_root(cos(phi)==sin(phi),0,pi/2)
0.785398163397448...
Differentiation, Integration, etc.¶
Sage knows how to differentiate and integrate many functions. For example, to differentiate \(\sin(u)\) with respect to \(u\), do the following:
sage: u = var('u')
sage: diff(sin(u), u)
cos(u)
To compute the fourth derivative of \(\sin(x^2)\):
sage: diff(sin(x^2), x, 4)
16*x^4*sin(x^2) - 48*x^2*cos(x^2) - 12*sin(x^2)
To compute the partial derivatives of \(x^2+17y^2\) with respect to \(x\) and \(y\), respectively:
sage: x, y = var('x,y')
sage: f = x^2 + 17*y^2
sage: f.diff(x)
2*x
sage: f.diff(y)
34*y
We move on to integrals, both indefinite and definite. To compute \(\int x\sin(x^2)\, dx\) and \(\int_0^1 \frac{x}{x^2+1}\, dx\)
sage: integral(x*sin(x^2), x)
-1/2*cos(x^2)
sage: integral(x/(x^2+1), x, 0, 1)
1/2*log(2)
To compute the partial fraction decomposition of \(\frac{1}{x^2-1}\):
sage: f = 1/((1+x)*(x-1))
sage: f.partial_fraction(x)
-1/2/(x + 1) + 1/2/(x - 1)
Solving Differential Equations¶
You can use Sage to investigate ordinary differential equations. To solve the equation \(x'+x-1=0\):
sage: t = var('t') # define a variable t
sage: x = function('x')(t) # define x to be a function of that variable
sage: DE = diff(x, t) + x - 1
sage: desolve(DE, [x,t])
(_C + e^t)*e^(-t)
This uses Sage’s interface to Maxima [Max], and so its output may be a bit different from other Sage output. In this case, this says that the general solution to the differential equation is \(x(t) = e^{-t}(e^{t}+c)\).
You can compute Laplace transforms also; the Laplace transform of \(t^2e^t -\sin(t)\) is computed as follows:
sage: s = var("s")
sage: t = var("t")
sage: f = t^2*exp(t) - sin(t)
sage: f.laplace(t,s)
-1/(s^2 + 1) + 2/(s - 1)^3
Here is a more involved example. The displacement from equilibrium (respectively) for a coupled spring attached to a wall on the left
|------\/\/\/\/\---|mass1|----\/\/\/\/\/----|mass2|
spring1 spring2
is modeled by the system of 2nd order differential equations
where \(m_{i}\) is the mass of object i, \(x_{i}\) is the displacement from equilibrium of mass i, and \(k_{i}\) is the spring constant for spring i.
Example: Use Sage to solve the above problem with \(m_{1}=2\), \(m_{2}=1\), \(k_{1}=4\), \(k_{2}=2\), \(x_{1}(0)=3\), \(x_{1}'(0)=0\), \(x_{2}(0)=3\), \(x_{2}'(0)=0\).
Solution: Take the Laplace transform of the first equation (with the notation \(x=x_{1}\), \(y=x_{2}\)):
sage: de1 = maxima("2*diff(x(t),t, 2) + 6*x(t) - 2*y(t)")
sage: lde1 = de1.laplace("t","s"); lde1
2*((-%at('diff(x(t),t,1),t=0))+s^2*'laplace(x(t),t,s)-x(0)*s)-2*'laplace(y(t),t,s)+6*'laplace(x(t),t,s)
This is hard to read, but it says that
(where the Laplace transform of a lower case function like \(x(t)\) is the upper case function \(X(s)\)). Take the Laplace transform of the second equation:
sage: de2 = maxima("diff(y(t),t, 2) + 2*y(t) - 2*x(t)")
sage: lde2 = de2.laplace("t","s"); lde2
(-%at('diff(y(t),t,1),t=0))+s^2*'laplace(y(t),t,s)+2*'laplace(y(t),t,s)-2*'laplace(x(t),t,s)-y(0)*s
This says
Plug in the initial conditions for \(x(0)\), \(x'(0)\), \(y(0)\), and \(y'(0)\), and solve the resulting two equations:
sage: var('s X Y')
(s, X, Y)
sage: eqns = [(2*s^2+6)*X-2*Y == 6*s, -2*X +(s^2+2)*Y == 3*s]
sage: solve(eqns, X,Y)
[[X == 3*(s^3 + 3*s)/(s^4 + 5*s^2 + 4),
Y == 3*(s^3 + 5*s)/(s^4 + 5*s^2 + 4)]]
Now take inverse Laplace transforms to get the answer:
sage: var('s t')
(s, t)
sage: inverse_laplace((3*s^3 + 9*s)/(s^4 + 5*s^2 + 4),s,t)
cos(2*t) + 2*cos(t)
sage: inverse_laplace((3*s^3 + 15*s)/(s^4 + 5*s^2 + 4),s,t)
-cos(2*t) + 4*cos(t)
Therefore, the solution is
This can be plotted parametrically using
sage: t = var('t')
sage: P = parametric_plot((cos(2*t) + 2*cos(t), 4*cos(t) - cos(2*t) ),
....: (t, 0, 2*pi), rgbcolor=hue(0.9))
sage: show(P)
The individual components can be plotted using
sage: t = var('t')
sage: p1 = plot(cos(2*t) + 2*cos(t), (t,0, 2*pi), rgbcolor=hue(0.3))
sage: p2 = plot(4*cos(t) - cos(2*t), (t,0, 2*pi), rgbcolor=hue(0.6))
sage: show(p1 + p2)
For more on plotting, see Plotting. See section 5.5 of [NagleEtAl2004] for further information on differential equations.
Euler’s Method for Systems of Differential Equations¶
In the next example, we will illustrate Euler’s method for first and second order ODEs. We first recall the basic idea for first order equations. Given an initial value problem of the form
we want to find the approximate value of the solution at \(x=b\) with \(b>a\).
Recall from the definition of the derivative that
where \(h>0\) is given and small. This and the DE together give \(f(x,y(x))\approx \frac{y(x+h)-y(x)}{h}\). Now solve for \(y(x+h)\):
If we call \(h \cdot f(x,y(x))\) the “correction term” (for lack of anything better), call \(y(x)\) the “old value of \(y\)”, and call \(y(x+h)\) the “new value of \(y\)”, then this approximation can be re-expressed as
If we break the interval from \(a\) to \(b\) into \(n\) steps, so that \(h=\frac{b-a}{n}\), then we can record the information for this method in a table.
\(x\) |
\(y\) |
\(h\cdot f(x,y)\) |
---|---|---|
\(a\) |
\(c\) |
\(h\cdot f(a,c)\) |
\(a+h\) |
\(c+h\cdot f(a,c)\) |
… |
\(a+2h\) |
… |
|
… |
||
\(b=a+nh\) |
??? |
… |
The goal is to fill out all the blanks of the table, one row at a time, until we reach the ??? entry, which is the Euler’s method approximation for \(y(b)\).
The idea for systems of ODEs is similar.
Example: Numerically approximate \(z(t)\) at \(t=1\) using 4 steps of Euler’s method, where \(z''+tz'+z=0\), \(z(0)=1\), \(z'(0)=0\).
We must reduce the 2nd order ODE down to a system of two first order DEs (using \(x=z\), \(y=z'\)) and apply Euler’s method:
sage: t,x,y = PolynomialRing(RealField(10),3,"txy").gens()
sage: f = y; g = -x - y * t
sage: eulers_method_2x2(f,g, 0, 1, 0, 1/4, 1)
t x h*f(t,x,y) y h*g(t,x,y)
0 1 0.00 0 -0.25
1/4 1.0 -0.062 -0.25 -0.23
1/2 0.94 -0.12 -0.48 -0.17
3/4 0.82 -0.16 -0.66 -0.081
1 0.65 -0.18 -0.74 0.022
Therefore, \(z(1)\approx 0.65\).
We can also plot the points \((x,y)\) to get an approximate
picture of the curve. The function eulers_method_2x2_plot
will
do this; in order to use it, we need to define functions \(f\) and
\(g\) which takes one argument with three coordinates: (\(t\), \(x\),
\(y\)).
sage: f = lambda z: z[2] # f(t,x,y) = y
sage: g = lambda z: -sin(z[1]) # g(t,x,y) = -sin(x)
sage: P = eulers_method_2x2_plot(f,g, 0.0, 0.75, 0.0, 0.1, 1.0)
At this point, P
is storing two plots: P[0]
, the plot of \(x\)
vs. \(t\), and P[1]
, the plot of \(y\) vs. \(t\). We can plot both of
these as follows:
sage: show(P[0] + P[1])
(For more on plotting, see Plotting.)
Special functions¶
Several orthogonal polynomials and special functions are implemented, using both PARI [GAP] and Maxima [Max]. These are documented in the appropriate sections (“Orthogonal polynomials” and “Special functions”, respectively) of the Sage reference manual.
sage: x = polygen(QQ, 'x')
sage: chebyshev_U(2,x)
4*x^2 - 1
sage: bessel_I(1,1).n(250)
0.56515910399248502720769602760986330732889962162109200948029448947925564096
sage: bessel_I(1,1).n()
0.565159103992485
sage: bessel_I(2,1.1).n()
0.167089499251049
At this point, Sage has only wrapped these functions for numerical use. For symbolic use, please use the Maxima interface directly, as in the following example:
sage: maxima.eval("f:bessel_y(v, w)")
'bessel_y(v,w)'
sage: maxima.eval("diff(f,w)")
'(bessel_y(v-1,w)-bessel_y(v+1,w))/2'
Vector calculus¶
See the Vector Calculus Tutorial.