Solving separable ODEs \(\displaystyle{\frac{{{\left.{d}{x}\right.}}}{{{\left.{d}{t}\right.}}}}={f{{\left({x}\right)}}}{g{{\left({t}\right)}}}\) with \(\displaystyle{x}{\left({0}\right)}={x}_{{0}}\)

nomadzkia0re

nomadzkia0re

Answered question

2022-03-31

Solving separable ODEs
dxdt=f(x)g(t) with x(0)=x0

Answer & Explanation

Cason Singleton

Cason Singleton

Beginner2022-04-01Added 13 answers

Step 1
The point is that if xx then x=0 from direct differentiation and also f(x)g(t)=0, so a constant function equal to a zero of f is a solution to the ODE. For it to be a solution to the IVP then you need x0=x.
Step 2
This needs a hypothesis that allows us to ensure that the solution is unique, so that one cannot have a constant solution and a non-constant solution to the same IVP (which would happen if any non-constant solution ever hit a zero of f, since then you could consider the IVP initialized when the non-constant solution hit the zero of f and get two solutions). Here that hypothesis is that f' is continuous. (As an aside, this particular hypothesis is not necessary for uniqueness, but merely f and g being continuous is not sufficient for uniqueness. So some additional hypothesis is required, this is just what they chose to use to write this problem.)
Step 3
Basically this is asking you to find a separable equation with non-unique solution to an IVP with x(0)=x0 and f(x0)=0. Hopefully you have already seen some examples of this otherwise it will be a bit challenging to make one up from scratch.

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