Matt1234 said:
Thank you for your help. So with regards to number 2) the zero solution was included in the original DE that's why I must make it a soln in my final equation? It seems confusing that they state y != 0 in the line where we have dy/y.
As far as 1) goes I'm still slightly confused. You mentioned the range of y is [0, infinity)
No, he didn't. You are not reading carefully. He said the range of |y| is [0, infinity).
then you said the range of y Is R. This is exactly where stuck i agree that the range starts from zero but done see where the -e comes in?
Why "-e" are you talking about? It goes back to the fact that knowing |x| does not tell us anything about the sign of x itself and so it might be either positive or negative.
Does this all go back to the fact that negative numbers are solns to the original DE?
I don't know what you mean by this.
Functions are solutions to differential equations, not numbers.
Thank you for your time,
Matt
In your first post you said
2) The part where it says we can easily see y= 0 is a solution, i don't see that at all. since e^x != 0
No, but "C", the constant multiplying the exponential, can be. But the fact is that, in some cases, there may be solutions to differential equations that do NOT fit whatever "general" solution you have written. In any case, whether a function is a solution to the equation does not depend upon whether it is or is not of a particular form but whether or not it
satisfies the equation. You certainly should be able to see that if y is identically equal to 0, then it is a constant, so its derivative is 0. That is, it satisfies y'= 0= x^2(0).