Saladsamurai
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Homework Statement
I thought that this was an interesting question.
(a) Show that (x^3 + y)dx + (y^3 +x)dy = 0\qquad(1) is exact.
(b)More generally, is M(x,y)dx + M(y,x)dy\qquad(2) exact? Explain.
Homework Equations
Test for exactness: \left(\frac{\partial{M}}{\partial{y}}\right)_x=\left(\frac{\partial{N}}{\partial{x}}\right)_y[/itex]<h2>The Attempt at a Solution</h2><br /> (a) Applying the test is simple enough. 1 = 1. Exact.<br /> <br /> (b) Now this is how I am thinking about (b). Please correct me if I am wrong. M is simply a rule. It is in the form M(x<sub>1</sub>,x<sub>2</sub>). It tells us how to operate on whatever is in the x<sub>1</sub> and x<sub>2</sub> spot. In equation (2), in the first term, x<sub>1</sub> = x and x<sub>2</sub> = y , and in the second term x<sub>1</sub> = y and x<sub>2</sub> = x. Wouldn't this imply that the equation will always be exact? Is there a way to show that it is or isn't?<br /> <br /> Any thoughts?