Differential Equation, Separable, I believe

Marylander
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Haven't done one of these in awhile and I was looking for a place to make sure I was doing it right. Hopefully one of you can take the time to look it over?

Homework Statement



Find the unique solution of the differential equation (3y^2)x(dy/dx)-x+1=0 for which y(e)=1

Homework Equations



None.

The Attempt at a Solution



(3y^2)dy=((x-1)/x)dx

Integrate

y^3=x-lnx+C

Substitute in for unique solution

1^3=e-ln(e)+C
2-e=C
 
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Hi Marylander ! Welcome to PF! :smile:

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Marylander said:
Find the unique solution of the differential equation (3y^2)x(dy/dx)-x+1=0 for which y(e)=1

(3y^2)dy=((x-1)/x)dx

Integrate

y^3=x-lnx+C

Substitute in for unique solution

1^3=e-ln(e)+C
2-e=C

Looks good! :biggrin:
 
Didn't think to. Too used to not having it.

Good, thanks for checking.
 
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