bubblewrap said:
If a and b are consecutive it means that there is no ##y_2## that's 0 between them. Which would mean for a continuous ##y_2##, there exists only 1 value c that satisfies ##f'(c)=0##, where ##f(x)=\frac{y_2}{y_1}##. This means that there cannot exist two ##y_1##s that are not 0.
Also you said in your previous post
So how does it work when ##y_1## is 0?
The whole "trick" with ##\frac{y_2}{y_1}## and Rolle's theorem only works if we assume that ##y_1## has no zeros in [a,b]. But, as you showed in post 5, this will lead to a contradiction with the fact that ##y_1,y_2## are a fundamental set of solutions to the differential equation.
The conclusion is that ##y_1## must be 0 somewhere in [a,b]. Actually, we even can say that ##y_1## must be 0 somewhere in ]a,b[, as functions in a fundamental set of solutions can't be 0 in the same point.
The question about what happens when ##y_1## is 0 is not relevant. That's what we wanted to prove in the first place, and that has been done.
Now for the second part: how can we prove that ##y_1## has only 1 zero in ]a,b[? We can't work with ##\frac{y_2}{y_1}##, because we already know that that function is not well-defined in the zero(s) of ##y_1##.
Hint: assume that ##y_1## has 2 zeros in ]a,b[. Use the first part of this exercise, and the "symmetry" between ##y_1## and ##y_2## to get a contradiction with the fact that a and b are
consecutive zeros of ##y_2##.