Wronskian Explained

In mathematics, the Wronskian of n differentiable functions is the determinant formed with the functions and their derivatives up to order . It was introduced in 1812 by the Polish mathematician Józef Wroński, and is used in the study of differential equations, where it can sometimes show the linear independence of a set of solutions.

Definition

The Wrońskian of two differentiable functions and is

W(f,g)=fg'-gf'

.

More generally, for real- or complex-valued functions, which are times differentiable on an interval, the Wronskian

W(f1,\ldots,fn)

is a function on

x\inI

defined byW(f_1, \ldots, f_n) (x)=\det \beginf_1(x) & f_2(x) & \cdots & f_n(x) \\f_1'(x) & f_2'(x) & \cdots & f_n' (x)\\\vdots & \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\f_1^(x)& f_2^(x) & \cdots & f_n^(x)\end.

This is the determinant of the matrix constructed by placing the functions in the first row, the first derivatives of the functions in the second row, and so on through the

(n-1)th

derivative, thus forming a square matrix.

When the functions are solutions of a linear differential equation, the Wrońskian can be found explicitly using Abel's identity, even if the functions are not known explicitly. (See below.)

The Wrońskian and linear independence

If the functions are linearly dependent, then so are the columns of the Wrońskian (since differentiation is a linear operation), and the Wrońskian vanishes. Thus, one may show that a set of differentiable functions is linearly independent on an interval by showing that their Wrońskian does not vanish identically. It may, however, vanish at isolated points.

A common misconception is that everywhere implies linear dependence. pointed out that the functions and have continuous derivatives and their Wrońskian vanishes everywhere, yet they are not linearly dependent in any neighborhood of . There are several extra conditions which combine with vanishing of the Wronskian in an interval to imply linear dependence.

Over fields of positive characteristic the Wronskian may vanish even for linearly independent polynomials; for example, the Wronskian of and 1 is identically 0.

Application to linear differential equations

In general, for an

n

th order linear differential equation, if

(n-1)

solutions are known, the last one can be determined by using the Wrońskian.

Consider the second order differential equation in Lagrange's notation:y = a(x)y' + b(x)ywhere

a(x)

,

b(x)

are known, and y is the unknown function to be found. Let us call

y1,y2

the two solutions of the equation and form their Wronskian W(x) = y_1 y'_2 - y_2 y'_1

Then differentiating

W(x)

and using the fact that

yi

obey the above differential equation shows thatW'(x) = a W(x)

Therefore, the Wronskian obeys a simple first order differential equation and can be exactly solved:W(x) = C~e^where

A'(x)=a(x)

and

C

is a constant.

Now suppose that we know one of the solutions, say

y2

. Then, by the definition of the Wrońskian,

y1

obeys a first order differential equation: y'_1 -\frac y_1 = -W(x)/y_2and can be solved exactly (at least in theory).

The method is easily generalized to higher order equations.

Generalized Wrońskians

For functions of several variables, a generalized Wronskian is a determinant of an by matrix with entries (with), where each is some constant coefficient linear partial differential operator of order . If the functions are linearly dependent then all generalized Wronskians vanish. As in the single variable case the converse is not true in general: if all generalized Wronskians vanish, this does not imply that the functions are linearly dependent. However, the converse is true in many special cases. For example, if the functions are polynomials and all generalized Wronskians vanish, then the functions are linearly dependent. Roth used this result about generalized Wronskians in his proof of Roth's theorem. For more general conditions under which the converse is valid see .

History

The Wrońskian was introduced by and given its current name by .

See also

References