Consider the problem \(\displaystyle{Y}'={d}{\frac{{{1}}}{{{t}+{1}}}}+{c}\cdot{{\tan}^{{-{1}}}{\left({Y}{\left({t}\right)}\right)}}-{d}{\frac{{{1}}}{{{2}}}},\quad{Y}{\left({0}\right)}={0}\) with c a given constant.

Dexter Odom

Dexter Odom

Answered question

2022-03-25

Consider the problem
Y=d1t+1+ctan1(Y(t))d12,Y(0)=0
with c a given constant. Since Y(0)=d12, the solution Y (t) is initially increasing as t increases, regardless of the value of c. As best you can, show that there is a value of c, call it c∗, for which (1) if c>c, the solution Y(t) increases indefinitely, and (2) if c<c, then Y(t) increases initially, but then peaks and decreases. Using ode45, determine c∗ to within 0.00005, and then calculate the associated solution Y(t) for 0t50.

Answer & Explanation

kachnaemra

kachnaemra

Beginner2022-03-26Added 16 answers

Step 1
c=0 can be integrated directly,
y(t)=y0(t)=ln(1+t)t2,
and the value at t=e21>6 is negative.
For any c>0, the observed initial slope gives an initial segment where y is positive.
Step 2
For C, even a small positive value of y will lead to a large slope catapulting the y curve towards very large values. After that the other two terms do not matter any more, the slope remains positive, y does not come down, back from "almost infinity".
One could try to make the last point a bit more quantitative by replacing "almost infinity" with some very large value, e.g., c=1000, and estimate the magnitude of all terms for t=0.01, to then find the announced behavior.

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