At school, or in a first-year course on DEs, we learn (perhaps in less abstract language) that if yo

groupweird40

groupweird40

Answered question

2022-05-23

At school, or in a first-year course on DEs, we learn (perhaps in less abstract language) that if you have a linear nth-order differential equation
L y = f
then the general solution is something of the form
y = a 1 y 1 + . . . + a n y n + g
where the y i are independent and satisfy L y i = 0, and g satisfies L g = f. Then we receive lots of training in how to find the y i and g.
Obviously any choice of the a i will give us a solution to L y = f. But how do you know that there aren't any more solutions?
We justify this by making an analogy with systems of linear equations A x = b, saying something along the lines of 'the space of solutions has the same dimension as the kernel of A'. But that works in finite dimensions - how do we know that the same is true with linear operators?

Answer & Explanation

delalbaef

delalbaef

Beginner2022-05-24Added 10 answers

Theorem [Existence and Uniqueness]: Let
a 0 ( x ) , a 1 ( x ) , , a n 1 ( x ) be continuous functions on [ a , b ] and let constants y 0 , y 1 , , y n 1 be given. Then there exists one and only one n-times continuously differentiable solution y ( x ) on [ a , b ] of the differential equation
y ( n ) ( x ) + a n 1 y ( n 1 ) ( x ) + + a 1 y ( 1 ) ( x ) + a 0 y ( x ) = 0
with initial endpoint values
y ( a ) = y 0 , y ( a ) = y 1 , y ( a ) = y 2 , , y ( n 1 ) ( a ) = y n 1 .
In other words, the solution of the homogenous differential equation y is uniquely determined once you know the values of y ( a ) , y ( a ) , y ( 2 ) ( a ) , , y ( n 1 ) ( a ). So the following map is a linear bijection between the solution space of the homogeneous equation and R n :
y [ y ( a ) y ( 1 ) ( a ) y ( n 1 ) ( a ) ]
If you choose y j to be the unique solution whose image under this map is the j-th standard basis vector for R n , then every solution of the homogeneous equation can be written uniquely as α 1 y 1 ( x ) + + α n y n ( x ) for real constants α j (why?). The difference of any two solutions solutions of the inhomogeneous equation is a solution of the homogeneous equation and, hence, must be such a linear combination.

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