Hello guys. I wish to further investigate this problem from the perspective of the following theorem (in Rainville and Bedient but no proof):
Consider the equation:
y^{''}=f(x,y,y^{'})
If f and its partial derivatives with respect to y and y^{'} are continuous functions in a region T defined by:
|x-x_0|\leq a,\quad |y-y_0|\leq b, \quad |y^{'}-y_0^{'}|\leq c,
then there exists an interval |x-x_0|\leq h AND a unique function \phi(x) such that \phi(x) is a solution of the differential equation for all x in the interval |x-x_0|\leq h such that:
\phi(x_0)=y_0\quad\text{and}\quad \phi^{'}(x_0)=y_0^{'}
Thus for:
y^{''}=t-\frac{t-1}{t}y^{'}-\frac{1}{t}y=f(t,y,y^{'})
we have:
\frac{\partial f}{\partial y}=-\frac{1}{t}
\frac{\partial f}{\partial y^{'}}=-\frac{t-1}{t}
Obviously f and the partials aren't continuous at t=0 and is consistent with Arildno's analysis above.
However, that's not good enough. The theorem makes no mention of "if and only if". Are there some equations with discontinuities which still allow unique solutions? I really need to determine for myself at what specific point in the proof does the absence of continuity affects uniqueness. I'll first work on it myself and if I have problems, E.L. Ince, "Ordinary Differential Equations" has a complete proof. Or I can ask you guys.
