Suppose y ( x ) = x 2 </msup> is a solution of y &quot;

Marquis Cooper

Marquis Cooper

Answered question

2022-06-01

Suppose y ( x ) = x 2 is a solution of y " + P ( x ) y + Q ( x ) y = 0 on (0,1) where P and Q are continuous functions on (0,1). Can both P and Q be bounded functions? Justify your answer.
I have tried differentiating y = x 2 , y = 2 x and y / x = 2. Differentiating this once again yielded y " y / x = 0. So I don't think P ( x ) can be bounded in (0,1). But Iam not so sure about whether this is correct or not. So it would be great if anyone has some ideas to share.

Answer & Explanation

celatw0kej

celatw0kej

Beginner2022-06-02Added 2 answers

The question you ask can be rewritten as : can one find P , Q bounded continuous functions such that :
2 + 2 x P ( x ) + x 2 Q ( x ) = 0
for x ( 0 , 1 ).
Letting x 0 and assuming by contradiction that P and Q are bounded, you find 2 = 0, so it cannot hold.
The reasoning you were doing had the right idea but in this kind of problem (proving something cannot exist) a useful method is to prove it by contradiction (indeed assuming something exists usually gives a lot of possibilities).

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