I have the differential equation \frac{d}{dx} ( p(x) \frac{df}{dx} ) +

g2esebyy7

g2esebyy7

Answered question

2022-04-29

I have the differential equation
ddx(p(x)dfdx)+=0
and I want to perform a generic change of variable from x to y=y(x).

Answer & Explanation

Kendrick Fritz

Kendrick Fritz

Beginner2022-04-30Added 12 answers

Step 1
It may be illuminating to work using functional notation rather than Leibniz notation. The expression you are concerned with rewriting is
(p·f')'=p'·f'+p·f''.
Let p=Py and f=Fy.. Thus p'=(P'y)·y', and f'=(F'y)·y', and 
f''=(F'y)'·y'+(F'y)·y''=(F''y)·(y')2+(F'y)·y''.
As such,
(p·f')'=(P'y)·y'·(F'y)·y'+(Py)·(F''y)·(y')2+(Py)·(F'y)·y''.

obettyQuokeperg6

obettyQuokeperg6

Beginner2022-05-01Added 14 answers

Step 1
It is correct that
ddx[p·dfdx]=ddy[p·dFdy·dydx]·dydx.
Here, you must use the product rule:
ddy[p·dFdy·dydx]·dydx
=ddy[p·dFdy](dydx)2+p·dFdy·dydx·ddy(dydx)
The secret here is that
ddy(dydx)
=ddy(1dxdy)
=-d2xdy2(dydx)2.
The problem here is that, in actuality, you really cannot do such arbitrary changes of variable without accounting for y' in the change of variables.

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