abcalphabeta Posted September 21, 2010 Posted September 21, 2010 i keep getting stuck in some problems of physics because the differential equation of the form a dy/dx + by = c f(x) keeps cropping up. is there any general method to solve this differential equation? when f(x) is sinusoidal, we avoid it using j operators and get the solution but in my particular problem f(x) is exponential.
the tree Posted September 27, 2010 Posted September 27, 2010 Yes, there is a general approach. More than one less-than-general approach. You may wish to Google around for "(first order) inhomogenous linear ODEs". In this case, the important thing is that a sum of solutions to an ODE, is a solution to that ODE. So for the most general answer you will want to give. y(x) = u(x) + v(x) Where u(x) is the a y(x) that satifies LHS=0 (the implicit sol'n). And v(x) is a y(x) that satisfies y(x)=RHS and LHS=RHS (the particular sol'n).
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