Page 1 of 1

The given differential equation is already in standard form, as the coefficient of the highest order derivative is 1. y′

Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2022 4:03 pm
by answerhappygod
The Given Differential Equation Is Already In Standard Form As The Coefficient Of The Highest Order Derivative Is 1 Y 1
The Given Differential Equation Is Already In Standard Form As The Coefficient Of The Highest Order Derivative Is 1 Y 1 (19.01 KiB) Viewed 35 times
I need this within 30 minutes. Thank you!
The given differential equation is already in standard form, as the coefficient of the highest order derivative is 1. y′′+3y′+2y=2+ex1​ The next Wronskians to calculate use y1​=e−x and y2​=e−2x that we identified from the complementary function and the function of x that makes the equation nonhomogeneous, f(x)=2+ex1​. W1​​=∣∣​0f(x)​y2​y2′​​∣∣​=∣∣​0(2+ex)−1​e−2x−2e−2x​∣∣​​ = W2​=∣∣​y1​y1′​​0f(x)​∣∣​ =∣∣​e−x−e−x​0(2+ex)−1​∣∣​ =
Solve the differential equation by variation of parameters. y′′+3y′+2y=2+ex1​ Step 1 We are given a nonhomogeneous second-order differential equation. Similar to the method of solving by undetermined coefficients, we first find the complementary function yc​ for the associated homogeneous equation. This time, the particular solution γp​ is based on Wronskian determinants and the general solution is y=yc​+yp​. First, we must find the roots of the auxiliary equation for y′′+3y′+2y=0. m2+3m+2=0 Solving for m, the roots of the auxiliary equation are as follows. smaller value m1​=−2 larger value m2​= Step 2 We have found that the roots of the auxiliary equation are m1​=−1 and m2​=−2. In the case that the auxiliary equation for a second-order linear equation has two distinct, real roots, we know the complementary function is of the form yc​=c1​em1​x+c2​em2​x. Therefore, the complementary function is as follows. yc​=c1​e−x+c2​e−2x Let y1​=e−x and y2​=e−2x be the two independent solutions which are terms of the complementary function. We will find functions u1​(x) and u2​(x) such that yp​=u1​y1​+u2​y2​ is a particular solution. These new functions are found by calculating multiple Wronskians. First, find the following Wronskian. w(y1​(x),y2​(x))=W(e−x,e−2x) ∣∣​y1​(x)y1′​(x)​y2​(x)y2′​(x)​∣∣​=∣e−xe−2x