Limit for \(\displaystyle{t}{r}{i}{g}{h}{t}{a}{r}{r}{w}{o}\infty\) of a solution to

resaplaha7dl

resaplaha7dl

Answered question

2022-03-23

Limit for trightarrwo of a solution to an ODE
Consider the Cauchy problem:
{y(t)=t22+sin(t2)cos(y(t)2)y(0)=0

Answer & Explanation

yaum3xg1

yaum3xg1

Beginner2022-03-24Added 12 answers

Step 1
First observe that the RHS
f:R2R,f(t,y)t22+sin(t2)cos(y(t)2)
is continuously differentiable in y. Therefore, for any pair (s, x)R2 there is exactly one solution y~ such that y~(s)=x.
Note that because of this uniqueness property, graphs of solutions do never cross.
It is obvious that y(t)=±π2 is a solution. So a (unique!) solution with y(0)=0 is bounded in between (π2,π2) (Just graph it and you will see.) Also note that since f>0 on
(0,R)×(π2,π2)
we have that y>0 which means that y increases strictly. Now, since y is bounded and strictly increasing, it has a limit at t.
Assume that ell =limty(t)(0,π2). Then , on t[1,)
y(t)=f(t,y(t)) has some interesting properties: Since y(0)=0 and due to y being strictly increasing, we must have that y(t)[y(1),ell] for all t1 where y(1)(0,ell]. In fact, one can see:
L =∈ft1f(t,y(t))>0
It follows:
limty(t)=
limt0tf(r,y(r))dr
limt1tf(r,y(r)) dr
limt1tLdr
=limtL(t1)=
So somehow limty(t)=, which clearly is a contradiction to the assumption. So we must have that ell=π2
This argument is far from being trivial, but it is one of the most important ones in ODE theory.

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