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Revision: Calculus >> Differential Equations Maths Commerce (English Medium) Class 12 CBSE

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Definitions [13]

Definition: Differential Equation

If an equation contains derivatives of one dependent variable with respect to one or more independent variables, then it is called a differential equation.

Example

\[x\frac{dy}{dx} + y = 0\]

This is a differential equation because it contains the derivative \[\frac{dy}{dx}\].

Definition: Ordinary Differential Equation

A differential equation that contains ordinary derivatives of one or more dependent variables with respect to a single independent variable is called an ordinary differential equation.

Example:

\[2\frac{d^2y}{dx^2} + \left(\frac{dy}{dx}\right)^3 = 0\]
Definition: Degree of the Differential Equation

The highest exponent of the highest derivative is called the degree of a differential equation, provided exponents of each derivative and an unknown variable appearing in the differential equation are non-negative integers.

Definition: Order of the Differential Equation

The order of the highest differential coefficient (or the highest order derivative appearing in a differential equation) is the order of the differential equation.

Definition: Particular Solution

A solution obtained from the general solution by assigning specific values to the arbitrary constants is called a particular solution.

Definition: Solution of a Differential Equation

For a differential equation, a solution is a function that makes the left-hand side equal to the right-hand side when the function and its required derivatives are substituted. If y = ϕ(x) satisfies the differential equation, then the curve represented by y = ϕ(x) is called the solution curve or integral curve.

Definition: General Solution

A solution containing arbitrary constants is called the general solution of a differential equation.

Definition: Equations in Variable Separable Form

The equation \[\frac{dy}{dx} = F(x, y)\] is said to be in variable separable form if it can be expressed as \[g(x) dx = h(y) dy\] or equivalently as \[\frac{dy}{dx} = g(x)h(y)\] so that the variables can be separated and integrated.

Definition: Homogeneous Differential Equations

A differential equation of the form \[\frac{dy}{dx}=\frac{f_{1}(x,y)}{f_{2}(x,y)},\] where f1(x, y) ) and f2(x, y)  are homogeneous functions of x and y of the same degree, is called a homogeneous differential equation.

Definition: Linear Differential Equations

A linear differential equation of first order and first degree is
\[\frac{\mathrm{d}y}{\mathrm{d}x}+\mathrm{P}y=\mathrm{Q}\], where P and Q are the functions of x or constants. Its general solution is  \[y.\left(\mathrm{I.F.}\right)=\int\mathrm{Q.}\left(\mathrm{I.F.}\right)\mathrm{d}x+\mathrm{c}\] and the function \[\mathrm{e}^{\int\mathrm{Pdx}}\] is called the integrating factor (I.F.) of the given equation.

Definition: Integrating Factor (I.F.)

The factor e∫P dx on multiplying by which the left-hand side of the differential equation\[\frac{dy}{dx}+Py=Q\] becomes the differential coefficient of a function of x and y, is called the integrating factor of the differential equation.

General Solution: \[y\cdot\mathrm{I.F.}=\int Q\cdot\mathrm{I.F.}dx+c\]

Definition: Non-Linear Differential Equation

A differential equation is non-linear if any one of the following holds:

  1. The degree is more than one

  2. Any differential coefficient has an exponent of more than one

  3. Exponent of the dependent variable is more than one

  4. Products containing the dependent variable and its differential coefficients are present

Definition: Initial Value Problems

first-order differential equation, along with an initial condition, is called an initial value problem.

Theorems and Laws [1]

Prove that:

`int_0^(2a)f(x)dx = int_0^af(x)dx + int_0^af(2a - x)dx`

Since ‘a’ lies between 0 and 2a,
we have

`int_0^(2a)f(x)dx=int_0^af(x)dx+int_a^(2a)f(x)dx,  .......(byint_a^bf(x)dx=int_a^cf(x)dx+int_c^bf(x)dx)`

`=I_1+I_2`     ........................(say)

`I_2 = int_a^(2a)f(x)dx`

Put x = 2a − t

Therefore, dx = −dt

When x = a, 2a − t = a

t = a

When x = 2a, 2a − t = 2a

t = 0

`I_2 = int_0^(2a) f(x) dx = int_a^0 f(2a - t) (-dt)`

`= -int_a^0 f(2a - t)dt = int_0^a f(2a - t)dt      ...................... (By int_a^b f(x)dx = -int_b^a f(x)dx)`

`=int_0^a f(2a - x)dx    ..............(By int_a^b f(X)dx = int_a^b f(t)dt)`

`int_0^(2a) f(x)dx = int_0^a f(x)dx + int_0^a f(2a - x)dx`

`= int_0^a [f(x) + f(2a - x)]dx`

To show that:

`int_0^pi sin x  dx = 2 int_0^(pi/2) sin x  dx`

We use the proven property by setting f(x) = sin x and 2a = π, which means a = `pi/2`.

The property tells us that:

`int_0^pi sin x  dx = int_0^(pi/2) sin  x  dx + int_0^(pi/2) sin (pi - x)  dx`

Knowing the trigonometric identity sin (π - x) = sin x, the equation simplifies to:

`int_0^pi sin x  dx = 2 int_0^(pi/2) sin x  dx`

This directly applies the property to the integral of sin x over [0, π] to show it equals twice the integral of sin x over `[0, pi/2]`, demonstrating the utility of this property in simplifying integrals with symmetric functions over specific intervals​.

Key Points

Key Points: Basic Concepts of Differential Equations
  • A differential equation contains derivatives.

  • An ordinary differential equation contains derivatives with respect to only one independent variable.

  • Differential equations describe rates of change in mathematics and science.

Key points: Order and Degree of a Differential Equation
  • Order = highest derivative order.

  • Degree = power of highest derivative.

  • Degree exists only for polynomial equations in derivatives.

  • Always check polynomial condition before stating the degree.

Key Points: General and Particular Solutions of a Differential Equation
  • A differential equation contains derivatives of an unknown function.
  • Its solution is generally a function, not a single number.

  • The graph of the solution function is called the solution curve or integral curve.

  • A general solution contains arbitrary constants.

  • A particular solution is obtained by assigning fixed values to those constants.

  • To verify a solution, substitute the function and its derivatives into the equation and check whether LHS = RHS.

Key Points: Variable Separable Differential Equations
  • Variable separable equations can be rewritten as x-part = y-part.

  • Separate variables first, then integrate.

  • Use one constant of integration.

  • Apply the initial condition only after getting the general solution.

  • Final answers may be explicit or implicit.

Key Points: Homogeneous Differential Equations
  • Check homogeneity first.

  • Differentiate substitution carefully.

  • Convert to separable form.

  • Back-substitute to original variables.

Key Points: Linear Differential Equations
  1. Write the equation in the form dy/dx + Py = Q
  2. Identify P and Q
  3. Find I.F. = \[\mathrm{e}^{\int\mathrm{Pdx}}\]
  4. Multiply the whole equation by I.F.
  5. Integrate and get a solution.
Key Points: Solving Integrating Factor
  • Write the equation in the form
    \[\frac{dy}{dx}+Py=Q\]

  • Find the integrating factor
    \[\mathrm{I.F.}=e^{\int Pdx}\]

  • Multiply the entire equation by I.F.

  • Integrate both sides w.r.t x

  • Obtain
    \[y(\mathrm{I.F.})=\int Q(\mathrm{I.F.})dx+c\]

Key Points: Application of Differential Equation
  1. Radioactive Decay:  \[x=x_0e^{-kt}\]
  2. Half-Life Formula: \[k=\frac{\ln2}{T}\]

  3. Newton’s Law of Cooling: \[\theta=\theta_0+(\theta_1-\theta_0)e^{-kt}\]

  4. Population Growth: \[P=ae^{kt}\]

Important Questions [57]

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