nanobot
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I am having trouble getting to a solution for this differential equation
[tex]2(x^2+2x)y' - y(x+1) = x^2+2x[/tex] -------- 1
for a series solution, we have to assume y = [tex]\sum a_{n}x^n[/tex] ---------- 2
if we divide equation 1 by [tex]x^2 + 2x[/tex], we get [tex](x+1)/(x^2+2x)[/tex] for the y term, which is where my problem is, i can't get that term to common out in the series and always leaves me with an x term.
may be i need to keep going with expression, what do you math geniuses think?
[tex]2(x^2+2x)y' - y(x+1) = x^2+2x[/tex] -------- 1
for a series solution, we have to assume y = [tex]\sum a_{n}x^n[/tex] ---------- 2
if we divide equation 1 by [tex]x^2 + 2x[/tex], we get [tex](x+1)/(x^2+2x)[/tex] for the y term, which is where my problem is, i can't get that term to common out in the series and always leaves me with an x term.
may be i need to keep going with expression, what do you math geniuses think?
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