Differential Equations. Solve in two ways.

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around solving the differential equation y''=1+(y')² in two different ways. Participants are exploring methods of integration and reduction of order, with a focus on the implications of missing variables.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants describe two methods for solving the equation, with the first method involving a substitution of y' with p and integrating. The second method leads to confusion regarding the transformation and the relationship between P(p) and Q(y). Questions arise about the integration process and the expected equivalence of results from both methods.

Discussion Status

There is an ongoing exploration of the two methods, with some participants providing guidance on the transformation of variables and integration techniques. However, there is no explicit consensus on the equivalence of the results, and participants continue to question the assumptions and definitions involved in the second method.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the original problem lacks specific values for x and y, which may affect the interpretation of the solutions. There is also mention of potential mistakes in the integration process and the definitions of R and Q functions, which are under scrutiny.

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Homework Statement



Solve y''=1+(y')2 in two ways, for x is missing and y is missing.

Homework Equations



Integration, and reduction of order.

The Attempt at a Solution



First method: (this is correct)
y''=1+(y')2 let y'=p and y''=p'
p'=1+p2
p'/(1+p2)=1
∫p'/(1+p2)dx=∫1dx
arctan(p)=x+c
solve for p: p=tan(x+c)
Substitute back for p=y'
y'=tan(x+c)
y=-ln(cos(x+c))+d

Second method: (I can't get it to come out as same answer from first method)
y''=1+(y')2 let y'=p and y''=p*(dp/dy)
p*(dp/dy)=1+p2

From here I can already tell I'm not going to get y=-ln(cos(x+c))+d but this is the method I am told to use..
 
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The second method will give you some P(p) = P(y') = y. So you have reduced the order. Then you transform it to y' = Q(y) and solve that.
 
I'm not following. What do you mean by P(p)=P(y')=y? And transforming it?
 
The second method will have dp/dy R(p) = 1. Integrated, that becomes P(p) = y, which means P(y') = y. This is a differential equation. To solve it, you need to find Q(y) that is the inverse of P(p), then Q(P(y')) = y' = Q(y).
 
Could you show me what it would look like?

For example, my first equation looks like p'=1+p2 after reduction of order.
 
Because I'm not sure where these R's and Q's are coming from. I know that typically in the second method y'=p and y''=p*(dp/dy)
 
## p' = 1 + p^2 \Rightarrow R(p) = \frac 1 {1 + p^2} \Rightarrow P(p) = \int R(p) dp ##
 
Doesn't this give y=∫1/(1+p2)dp=arctan(p)+c

The way I understood it is that both methods should get you the same answer.

I know that the answer should be -ln(cos(x+c))+d
 
arctan p + C = P(p). Now you need the inverse function Q(y).
 
  • #10
This makes no sense. The inverse is -tan(c-p)
 
  • #11
Again. You have integrated dp/dy R(p) = 1. That gave you P(p) = y. P(p) = arctan p + c. You then obtain p = Q(y). Q(y) is tan (y - c). Since p = y', you get y' = p = tan (y - c). Integrate it.
 
  • #12
-ln(cos(c-y))+d That's what I keep getting. Maybe that's right, I just assumed the answer was supposed to be -ln(cos(x+c))+d
 
  • #13
That's because you made a mistake. It must be R(p) = p/(1 + p^2), not 1/(1 + p^2).
 

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