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Oct 1st, 2006, 09:44 AM
#1
Thread Starter
Hyperactive Member
[resolved] Differential Equation
I have this problem that I have been working at for the past hour and 30 minutes. I kid you not. I have no friends that are math geniuses so this is really the only place I can go to for help. The problem is online and it tells me whether or not it is correct. I have ended up with a solution that I can't see how is incorrect, but it is rejecting it. I would really appreciate it if someone could help me:
I'm supposed to find a solution to the differential equation:
x^2/(y^2-6)^2 * dy/dx = 1/2y
It needs to satisfy the initial condition of y=sqrt(7) at x=-1.
So first, I seperate the variables to get y and dy on one side and x and dx on the other. I obtain the following:
(2y(y^2-6)^-2)dy = (x^2)dx
I then integrate both sides and get:
-1(y^2-6)=x^3/3+C
C is a constant.
After doing that, I put sqrt(7) in for y and -1 in for x and solve for C. I obtain C=-2/3 I then proceed to solve for Y because the function must be in the format as y=(function) when I enter it on the webpage. I get the following when doing this:
sqrt(6-3/(3C+x^3))
I replace C with the value I got above and get:
sqrt(6-3/(-2+x^3))
When I submit this answer, it claims that it is incorrect. I don't nescessarily want you to give me the answer, I'd just like to know where I went wrong.
Last edited by Arrow_Raider; Oct 2nd, 2006 at 05:33 PM.
Reason: resolved
My monkey wearing the fedora points and laughs at you.
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Oct 1st, 2006, 10:27 AM
#2
Re: Differential Equation
OK, I have no idea if your answer is correct or not (no math genius here either), but could it be that the expected answer is not:
sqrt(6-3/(-2+x^3)),
But instead:
sqrt(3/(-2+x^3)) (Replaced '6-3' with '3')
Just a thought!
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Oct 1st, 2006, 10:34 AM
#3
Member
Re: Differential Equation
I don't think you split the variables correctly.
x^2/(y^2-6)^2 * dy/dx = 1/2y
Splitting gives:
(1/x^2)dx = (2y/(y^2-6)^2)dy
doesn't it?
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Oct 2nd, 2006, 02:33 AM
#4
Addicted Member
Re: Differential Equation
 Originally Posted by Arrow_Raider
I have this problem that I have been working at for the past hour and 30 minutes. I kid you not. I have no friends that are math geniuses so this is really the only place I can go to for help. The problem is online and it tells me whether or not it is correct. I have ended up with a solution that I can't see how is incorrect, but it is rejecting it. I would really appreciate it if someone could help me:
I'm supposed to find a solution to the differential equation:
x^2/(y^2-6)^2 * dy/dx = 1/2y
It needs to satisfy the initial condition of y=sqrt(7) at x=-1.
So first, I seperate the variables to get y and dy on one side and x and dx on the other. I obtain the following:
(2y(y^2-6)^-2)dy = (x^2)dx
I then integrate both sides and get:
-1(y^2-6)=x^3/3+C
.
This integration is incorrect on the left hand side
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