How to solve coupled second order differential equations

Anahi Solomon

Anahi Solomon

Answered question

2022-03-29

How to solve coupled second order differential equations
2y3y+2z+3y+z=e2x
y3y+z+2yz=0

Answer & Explanation

zalutaloj9a0f

zalutaloj9a0f

Beginner2022-03-30Added 17 answers

Step 1
It is visible after some contemplation that the highest derivatives of z and y occur in the same linear combination in both equations, marking the system as a DAE system of index at least one.
To better handle the structure, define u=y+z for this combination and eliminate z from the system.
2u4y+3y+u=e2x
u2y+2yu=0
Again the terms in the highest derivatives y',u' occur in the same linear combination. So set v=u2y=y+z2y and eliminate u against v to get an explicit index-1 DAE system.
2v+5y+v=e2x
vv=0
This now can be isolated for the highest order derivatives (or non-derivatives) (y,v') to get
5y=e2x3v
v=v
This system, which resulted just from easily reversible variable substitutions, now indeed has only one integration constant.
So, inserting backwards,
v=Cex,
y=15e2x3Cex,
u=v+2y=152e2xCex
z=uy=152e2xCex152e2x3Cex=25Cex
Malia Booth

Malia Booth

Beginner2022-03-31Added 16 answers

Step 1
Define Y(s)=L(y(t)) and Z(s)=L(z(t)) where L denotes the laplace transform.
Put a=y(0), b=y(0), c=z(0)
With a little algebra your DE becomes
(2s23s+3)Y(s)+(2s+1)Z(s)
=as+1s2+2b+2c
(s23s+2)Y(s)+(s1)Z(s)
=as3a+b+c
This can be expressed as a linear system
(2s23s+32s+1s23s+2s1)(Y(s)Z(s))=(as+1s2+2b+2cas3a+b+c)
Can you finish? Keep in mind, once you solve this system via the inverse laplace transform L1, the constants a,b,c,d will be your arbitrary constants in your general solution.

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