syj
- 53
- 0
Homework Statement
\frac{dr}{dt}=r(u-r)
Homework Equations
i rewrote this as \frac{dr}{dt}-ur=-r^2
i think this is like bernoulli's equation
The Attempt at a Solution
so i let w=\frac{1}{r} so that r=\frac{1}{w}
this gives me
\frac{dr}{dt}=-1w^{-2}\frac{dw}{dt}
so now i have
-w^{-2}\frac{dw}{dt}-uw^{-1}=-w^{-2}
if i divide by -w^{-2}
then i get a linear differential equation
\frac{dw}{dt}+uw=1
the integrating factor is e^{ut}
so i get w=\frac{1}{u}+w_0e^{-ut}
from my definition of w i have w_0=\frac{1}{r_0} and w=\frac{1}{r}
so i get r=\frac{ur_0}{r_0+ue^{-ut}}
is this right?