Solutions To Calculus Tutorial 4
Solutions To Calculus Tutorial 4
Material covered
(1) Linear first order differential equations
(We ignore the modulus in the log term as we only require one particular form for 𝑟 (𝑥).)
Multiplying the standard form through by 𝑥 2 and rewriting the left-hand side of the DE
𝑑 𝑥4 𝑥2 𝐶
produces (𝑥 2 𝑦) = 2𝑥 3 , which integrates to 𝑥 2 𝑦 = +𝐶, or 𝑦 = + 2 . Putting 𝑦 = 1
𝑑𝑥 2 2 𝑥
1 𝑥2 1
when 𝑥 = 1 shows that 𝐶 = , so that the required particular solution is 𝑦 = + 2.
2 2 2𝑥
𝐿3
𝑉= and 𝑆 = 𝐿2 .
10
𝑑 2 𝑦 2 𝑑𝑦
*4. Given the differential equation + = 0.
𝑑𝑥 2 𝑥 𝑑𝑥
(a) What is the order of the given differential equation? Is it linear?
Solution: The equation is a second-order (homogeneous) linear differential equation
(not with constant coefficients).
𝑑𝑦
(b) Solve the equation using the substitution 𝑤 = .
𝑑𝑥
𝑑𝑤 2
Solution: Substitution yields differential equation = − 𝑤. This is a separable
𝑑𝑥 𝑥
equation with general solution
𝑤(𝑥) = 𝑒 −2 ln |𝑥|+𝐶 = 𝐴𝑥 −2 ,
𝑑𝑦
where 𝐴 = 𝑒𝐶 . Substituting back we obtain = 𝐴𝑥 −2 . This can be solved by
𝑑𝑥
antidifferentiation to obtain
𝐴
𝑦(𝑥) = − + 𝐵.
𝑥