Ask Question
18 June, 20:06

Verify that y1 (t) = 1 and y2 (t) = t ^1/2 are solutions of the differential equation:

yy'' + (y') ^ 2 = 0, t > 0. (3)

Then show that for any nonzero constants c1 and c2, c1 + c2t^1/2 is not a solution of this equation.

+1
Answers (1)
  1. 18 June, 23:07
    0
    Answer: it is verified that:

    * y1 and y2 are solutions to the differential equation,

    * c1 + c2t^ (1/2) is not a solution.

    Step-by-step explanation:

    Given the differential equation

    yy'' + (y') ² = 0

    To verify that y1 solutions to the DE, differentiate y1 twice and substitute the values of y1'' for y'', y1' for y', and y1 for y into the DE. If it is equal to 0, then it is a solution. Do this for y2 as well.

    Now,

    y1 = 1

    y1' = 0

    y'' = 0

    So,

    y1y1'' + (y1') ² = (1) (0) + (0) ² = 0

    Hence, y1 is a solution.

    y2 = t^ (1/2)

    y2' = (1/2) t^ (-1/2)

    y2'' = (-1/4) t^ (-3/2)

    So,

    y2y2'' + (y2') ² = t^ (1/2) * (-1/4) t^ (-3/2) + [ (1/2) t^ (-1/2) ]² = (-1/4) t^ (-1) + (1/4) t^ (-1) = 0

    Hence, y2 is a solution.

    Now, for some nonzero constants, c1 and c2, suppose c1 + c2t^ (1/2) is a solution, then y = c1 + c2t^ (1/2) satisfies the differential equation.

    Let us differentiate this twice, and verify if it satisfies the differential equation.

    y = c1 + c2t^ (1/2)

    y' = (1/2) c2t^ (-1/2)

    y'' = (-1/4) c2t (-3/2)

    yy'' + (y') ² = [c1 + c2t^ (1/2) ][ (-1/4) c2t (-3/2) ] + [ (1/2) c2t^ (-1/2) ]²

    = (-1/4) c1c2t (-3/2) + (-1/4) (c2) ²t (-3/2) + (1/4) (c2) ²t^ (-1)

    = (-1/4) c1c2t (-3/2)

    ≠ 0

    This clearly doesn't satisfy the differential equation, hence, it is not a solution.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “Verify that y1 (t) = 1 and y2 (t) = t ^1/2 are solutions of the differential equation: yy'' + (y') ^ 2 = 0, t > 0. (3) Then show that for ...” in 📙 Mathematics if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers