Where do these other initial conditions come from? I

Kassandra Cherry

Kassandra Cherry

Answered question

2022-03-13

Where do these other initial conditions come from?
I have the problem 2dydt=y(y2),y(0)=3, which I get how to solve up until the intial conditions. The solution is y(t)=21Cet. The solution then plugs in three initial conditions and solves for C. They do y(0)=1,y(0)=1, and y(0)=3 and then solve each of these. Where did the other two come from?
Also, the problem asks to determine the interval of existence. This one is straightforward, but there are others where the interval is something like (,2)(2,) and they plug in t=0 and then take only the interval that solution lies in. Why is that?
Exact wording: Identify the equilibrium (constant) solutions for this nonlinear ODE. a) identify the equilibrium solutions for the nonlinear ODE. b) Solve the IVP for the initial condition, y(0)=3. Determine the existence interval and the limit of y(t) as t approaches the endpoints of the interval.

Answer & Explanation

zakulisan337

zakulisan337

Beginner2022-03-14Added 3 answers

Step 1
The only initial condition given by the problem is y(0)=3, so there is no reason why the other ones should be relevant. Regarding the equilibrium solutions, notice that this equation is of the form
y=f(y).
The equilibrium solutions are given by the constant functions y such that f(y)=0. I will leave it up to you to figure it out from here.
As for the initial value problem, the equation is equivalent to
2y(y2)y=1,
and notice that 2y(y2)=y(y2)y(y2)=1y21y,
hence yy2yy=1.
Step 2
By integrating, one has that
ln[y(t)2y(0)2]ln[y(t)y(0)]=t=ln[y(t)2]ln[y(t)]+ln(3).
As such, y(t)2y(t)=12y(t)=et3.
This is equivalent to y(t)=21et3=63et.
Notice that y has a singularity at ln(3). For t>ln(3), we have that et>3, hence et<3, so 3et<0, which is equivalent to y(t)<0. This contradicts the condition that y(t)>2, and this is why only the interval (,ln(3)) is taken as the domain of the solution. The initial condition y(0)=3 does not determine a unique solution of the differential equation on (ln(3),).
Summer Berg

Summer Berg

Beginner2022-03-15Added 2 answers

Explanation:
Given the Cauchy problem
{2y=y(y2)y(0)=a
you can find the equilibrium solutions y0 for a= and y2 for a=2. Since f(x,y)=12y(y2)C1(R2), we know that f is continuous and locally lipshitz in y uniformly respect to x, which means that d,δ,L>0 such that x[d,d],y1,y2Bδ(a)Vertf(x,y1)f(x,y2)VertVerty1y2Vert. This implies that aR,IaR, with 0Ia, such that it's defined a unique solution for the Cauchy problem ya:IaR. For the theorem of existence and uniqueness, the solutions ya, for a0,2, must be contained in the region (,0) or (0, 2) or (2,+) (the solutions defined for aR{0,2} can't intersect the functions y0,2).
Assuming a0,2 you can solve the equation
ay2dζζ(ζ+2)=0xdξay2ζ(ζ+2)dζ=x so
log(dyy2)log(daa2)=x and from this relation we can find y:
log(yy2)=x+log(aa2)yy2=ex+log(aa2)y=ex+log(aa2)(y2)y(x)=d2ex+log(aa2)1ex+log(aa2)=d2aa2ex1aa2ex
The interval Ia is determined by the parameter a.

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