Solve Differential Equation: dy/dx = dt

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hi,

is it possible to solve the following equation,

dy = dx/dt

for relation between y and x?

thanks
 
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You'll have to tell us more. Where did you find that equation? In what context does this problem come up? What else do you know about x and y?
 
suma said:
hi,

is it possible to solve the following equation,

dy = dx/dt

for relation between y and x?
I've never seen an equation like this, with a differential on one side and a derivative on the other.
 
In fact, you can't have an equation of that form. In terms of "non-standard analysis" a differential and "ordinary" function are different orders of objects and cannot be equal.

(You can say that dy= \frac{dy}{dx}\frac{dx}{dt} dt because there are differentials on both sides.)
 
let's take dy = k dx/dt where k is a constant, can then the value of y in terms of x or vice versa be solved?

i think it is possible to solve this, asking the physics and mathematicians who have encountered such problem

mathematicians help out here!

thanks
 
You have already been told by the "physics and mathematicians" out there that such a combination of symbols is meaningless- the two sides of the purported "equation" are different types of objects and so cannot be equal. That would be asking to solve "green= C sharp".

What reason do you have, after being told that the "equation" is meaningless, to "think it is possible to solve this"?
 
i think that any two quantities x and y once appears with equality equation like that should have solution
 
The question has been asked and answered, so I'm closing this thread.
 
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