Wire an inductor and a capacitor in parallel and you get a resonant circuit, use 1/2PI*SQRT(LC) to calculate the resonant frequency, we all know this as it's basic electronics. The problem is that there are an infinite number of LC combinations, 25,33uH and 1000pF will resonate at 1 MHz but so will 2,533mH and 10pF. The first example has a large capacitor and the second has a large inductor,
So, here's the problem. Given that only frequency is known give me a formula that works out an LC value where a 1pF change in C will give a 1 KHz change in F. Warning, this is NOT an easy problem and after a day in front of a spreadsheet I've given up for the night 
Hello again,
Providing the frequency first is too easy :-)
If you specify the inductance L, the change in capacitance 'dc' (1e-12 here), and the change in angular frequency 'dw' then we have again (similar to post #11):
1/sqrt(LC)-dw=1/(sqrt(L*(C+dc)))
or:
1/sqrt(C)-sqrt(L)*dw=1/sqrt(C+dc)
Solving this for C gives the capacitance needed when L is given, and since this equation is independent of frequency you dont have to specify that. This allows finding C for any L, period, that matches the required dw and dc.
This may be more useful because very often we cant set the value of L exactly, and specifying the frequency instead of the inductance means we might need a very unusual value of L for the circuit.
This is more interesting anyway :-)