Akitirija
- 17
- 0
The problem is from Adam's Calculus (7th Ed). It is an initial value problem, and I solved it:
<br /> \begin{cases}<br /> y'=\frac{3+2x^{2}}{x^{2}} \\<br /> y(-2)=1<br /> \end{cases} \\<br /> \implies y=-\frac{3}{x}+2x+\frac{7}{2}<br />
I can see that the solution is not valid for x=0, but the book says that the solutions is only valid for the interval
(-\infty,0) because "that is the largest interval that contains the initial point -2 but not the point x=0.
I do not understand this. Why can x not be larger than 0?
<br /> \begin{cases}<br /> y'=\frac{3+2x^{2}}{x^{2}} \\<br /> y(-2)=1<br /> \end{cases} \\<br /> \implies y=-\frac{3}{x}+2x+\frac{7}{2}<br />
I can see that the solution is not valid for x=0, but the book says that the solutions is only valid for the interval
(-\infty,0) because "that is the largest interval that contains the initial point -2 but not the point x=0.
I do not understand this. Why can x not be larger than 0?
Last edited: