Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
Solve the following differential equation:
(x2 − y2)dx + 2xy dy = 0
Advertisements
उत्तर
Given:
(x2 − y2)dx + 2xy dy = 0
2xy dy = −(x2 − y2) dx
∴ `"dy"/"dx" = − ("x"^2 − "y"^2)/"2xy" = (y^2 − x^2)/(2xy)` ....[1]
Put y = vx
∴ y = vx ⇒`"dy"/"dx" = "v"+ x("dv")/"dx"`
`v + x(dv)/dx = (v^2 − 1)/(2v)`
∴ `v + x (dv)/dx = ((vx)^2 − x^2)/(2x (vx)) = (x^2(v^2 − 1))/(2vx^2) = (v^2 − 1)/(2v)`
∴ `x (dv)/dx = (v^2 − 1)/(2v) − v = (v^2 − 1 − 2v^2)/(2v) = (− (v^2 + 1))/(2v)`
⇒ `x (dv)/dx = − (v^2 + 1)/(2v)`
⇒ `(2v)/(v^2 + 1)dv = − 1/x dx`
Integrating both sides, we get:
⇒ `∫ (2v)/(v^2 + 1)dv = − ∫ 1/x dx`
⇒ log (v2 + 1) = − log x + log c1
⇒ log (x(v2 + 1)) = log c1
⇒ x(v2 + 1) = c1
⇒ `x (1 + y^2/x^2) = c_1` ...[putting `v = y/x`]
⇒ `x + y^2/x^2 = c_1` ...[Multiply by x]
⇒ x2 + y2 = c1x ...[Let c = c1]
= x2 + y2 = cx
