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RadiationX
May28-05, 10:59 AM
i'm trying to find what the intermediate steps were used in solving this differential equation:
y'' + y' -3y =0
m=\frac{-1\pm\sqrt{13}}{2} now we have
y=C_1e^{\frac{-.5+\sqrt{13}}{2}}t + C_2e^{\frac{-.5 -\sqrt{13}}{2}}t
note that the .5 are 1\2. i couldn't get the latex for this to work
arildno
May28-05, 11:01 AM
Do you know where "m" came from?
RadiationX
May28-05, 11:11 AM
Do you know where "m" came from?
that m came from the auxillary equation of the differential
r^2 +r -3=0
arildno
May28-05, 11:15 AM
So what's bugging you, then?
i'm trying to find what the intermediate steps were used in solving this differential equation:
y'' + y' -3y =0
m=\frac{-1\pm\sqrt{13}}{2} now we have
y=C_1e^{\frac{-.5+\sqrt{13}}{2}}t + C_2e^{\frac{-.5 -\sqrt{13}}{2}}t
note that the .5 are 1\2. i couldn't get the latex for this to work
As you noted, you created the auxiliary (or characteristic) equation. The auxiliary equation was solved via the quadratic formula.
Note: You should have:
y=C_1e^{(-.5 + \frac{\sqrt{13}}{2})t} + C_2e^{(-.5-\frac{\sqrt{13}}{2})t}
HallsofIvy
May29-05, 12:09 PM
If you were wondering where the characteristic equation came from, assume a solution ofthe form y= ert, plug it into the differential equation and see what r must be in order to make the equation true.
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