How Do I Decompose This Fraction in My ODE?

smallzilla
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hello I am stuck on an ODE involving substitution. I have done the correct substitutions, but have become stuck on decomposing the fraction.
i have the following

∫(1/x)dx + ∫(u+1)/(u^2+1)du = 0

Im stuck on breaking the u down into a partial decomposition. Could anyone offer some advice on how to start decomposing this bad boy?

Thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You don't need to decompose that with partial fractions.
Split up the (u+1)/(u^2+1) as u/(u^2 + 1) + 1/(u^2+1).
Now you can do a substitution on the 1st term and the 2nd term is just arctan(u).
I'm not even sure that you could do a partial fraction decomposition on that because you can't factor the denominator.
 
I see, thanks for pointing that out! I'm do for an algebra review it seems :)
 
Thread 'Direction Fields and Isoclines'
I sketched the isoclines for $$ m=-1,0,1,2 $$. Since both $$ \frac{dy}{dx} $$ and $$ D_{y} \frac{dy}{dx} $$ are continuous on the square region R defined by $$ -4\leq x \leq 4, -4 \leq y \leq 4 $$ the existence and uniqueness theorem guarantees that if we pick a point in the interior that lies on an isocline there will be a unique differentiable function (solution) passing through that point. I understand that a solution exists but I unsure how to actually sketch it. For example, consider a...

Similar threads

Back
Top