MHB Oil Spill - Differential Equations

echianne
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Hello everyone. I hope anyone can help me with this problem. I will greatly appreciate it. Willing to compensate anybody to answer this problem correctly for me.
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echianne said:
Hello everyone. I hope anyone can help me with this problem. I will greatly appreciate it. Willing to compensate anybody to answer this problem correctly for me. View attachment 11832View attachment 11833
This is a free forum. We volunteer our time... payment is not necessary. However in order to help you best we need to have an idea of just where you are running into problems. What are you able to do with this?

-Dan
 
topsquark said:
This is a free forum. We volunteer our time... payment is not necessary. However in order to help you best we need to have an idea of just where you are running into problems. What are you able to do with this?

-Dan
Thank you so much. I have come up with different systems of DE but nothing seemed to work. I think there is something wrong with how I understood the problem.
 
echianne said:
Thank you so much. I have come up with different systems of DE but nothing seemed to work. I think there is something wrong with how I understood the problem.
What have you tried?

-Dan
 
The crucial information is in the last two sentences: "So at time t, the ith cell contains $s_i$ wL $ft^3$ of oil. Oil flows out of cell i at a rate equal to $s_i(t)$ wv $ft^3/s$ and flows into cell i at a rate equal to $s_{i-1}(t)$ wv $ft^3/s$. It flows into the first cell at rate S $ft^3/s$".

That is just saying that the rate oil flows into one cell is the rate at which it flows out of the previous cell.
The DERIVATIVE of the amount of oil ($s_i(t)$) at a given x (at a given cell) is the rate at which oil is flowing in minus the rate at which it is flowing out: $\Delta s_i(t)= (s_{i-1}(t)- s_i(t))\Delta t$.
$\frac{\Delta s_i(t)}{\Delata t}= (s_{i-1}(t)- s_i(t))= -(s_i(t)- s_{i-1})$.

Taking the limit as the length of each of each cell goes to 0, $\frac{ds}{dt}= s$ with initial value s(0)= S.
 
Are there any good visualization tutorials, written or video, that show graphically how separation of variables works? I particularly have the time-independent Schrodinger Equation in mind. There are hundreds of demonstrations out there which essentially distill to copies of one another. However I am trying to visualize in my mind how this process looks graphically - for example plotting t on one axis and x on the other for f(x,t). I have seen other good visual representations of...
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