Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems 9th Edition

Published by Wiley
ISBN 10: 0-47038-334-8
ISBN 13: 978-0-47038-334-6

Chapter 2 - First Order Differential Equations - 2.2 Separable Equations - Problems - Page 48: 13

Answer

(a) The solution of this differential equation is $y=-\sqrt{2\ln{(1+x^2)}+4}$. (c) The interval in which the solution is defined is $[\sqrt{e^{-2}-1},\infty]$. (b)

Work Step by Step

(a) We have given $\dfrac{dy}{dx}=\dfrac{2x}{y+x^2y}$ Now solve the differential equation as follows: $\dfrac{dy}{dx}=\dfrac{2x}{y(1+x^2)}$ $y\,dy=\dfrac{2x}{(1+x^2)}\,dx$ Now integrate both sides as follows: $\int y\,dy=\int\dfrac{2x}{(1+x^2)}\,dx$ Now let $1+x^2=t \implies 2x\,dx=dt$ We get, $\int y\,dy=\int\dfrac{1}{t}\,dt$ $\dfrac{y^{2}}{2}=\ln{t}+C$ Now substitute back $t$. We get, $\dfrac{y^{2}}{2}=\ln{(1+x^2)}+C$ Or, $y=\pm\sqrt{2\ln{(1+x^2)}+C_0}$ Thus the explicit form can be $y=\sqrt{2\ln{(1+x^2)}+C_0}$ or $y=-\sqrt{2\ln{(1+x^2)}+C_0}$. We have given the initial condition $y(0) = -2$. Thus, only $y=-\sqrt{2\ln{(1+x^2)}+C_0}$ is possible. Substitute $x=0$ and $y =-2$ We get, $-2=-\sqrt{2\ln{(1)}+C_0}$ $\implies 2=\sqrt{C_0}$ $\implies C_0=4$ Hence, the solution of this differential equation is $y=-\sqrt{2\ln{(1+x^2)}+4}$. (c) We know that the value inside the square root can not be negative. Therefore, $2\ln{(1+x^2)}+4\ge 0$ $\implies 2\ln{(1+x^2)}\ge -4$ $\implies \ln{(1+x^2)} \ge -2$ $\implies 1+x^2\ge e^{-2}$ $\implies x\ge \sqrt{e^{-2}-1}$ Hence, the interval in which the solution is defined is $[\sqrt{e^{-2}-1},\infty]$. (b)
Update this answer!

You can help us out by revising, improving and updating this answer.

Update this answer

After you claim an answer you’ll have 24 hours to send in a draft. An editor will review the submission and either publish your submission or provide feedback.