View Full Version : What kind of differential equation is this
fishingspree2
Nov1-11, 05:08 PM
I am trying to solve a real-world problem, and I have modeled it with the following equation:
\frac{dS}{dt}-3\left (\frac{150-S}{100-t} \right )+\frac{2S}{100+t}=0
What kind of differential equation is that? Is it solvable analytically ?
Maple tells me it is linear, but I don't see how...
lurflurf
Nov1-11, 06:55 PM
I forget what that is called, but it is linear and easily solved. Clear denominators
(t-100)(t+100)s'(t) = (t+500) s(t)-450 t-45000
solve
(t-100)(t+100) s'(t) = (t+500) s(t)
use that to solve the original
naturally terms like
(t-100)m(t+100)n
arise
JJacquelin
Nov2-11, 04:17 AM
I am trying to solve a real-world problem, and I have modeled it with the following equation:
\frac{dS}{dt}-3\left (\frac{150-S}{100-t} \right )+\frac{2S}{100+t}=0
What kind of differential equation is that? Is it solvable analytically ?
Maple tells me it is linear, but I don't see how...
It is a first order linear ODE
Of course it is easy to solve it, thanks to classical method.
"Linear" means linear relatively to the sought function S (There is no Sē nor other functions of S. There are only S and S' in the equation).
It doesn't mean linear relatively to the variable t.
Fusiontron
Nov2-11, 10:47 PM
Write: dS/dt + f(t)S = g(t).
I am trying to solve a real-world problem, and I have modeled it with the following equation:
\frac{dS}{dt}-3\left (\frac{150-S}{100-t} \right )+\frac{2S}{100+t}=0
What kind of differential equation is that? Is it solvable analytically ?
Maple tells me it is linear, but I don't see how...
Looks like rate of equation that determines solution or volume of liquid into a tank and out. Again it is solvable via separable equations.
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