I am solving a differential equation <mstyle displaystyle="true" scriptlevel="0">

veirarer

veirarer

Answered question

2022-06-21

I am solving a differential equation d y d t = y + 1 t + 1 .
I got the solution y = c ( t + 1 ) 1, c a constant.
But the handout by my professor says
"The solution is y = c ( t + 1 ) 1, c a constant. where t 1. But it does not mean that y is not defined at t 1. It means that y can take any value at t = 1 as long as it satisfies y = c ( t + 1 ) 1."
It does not make much sense to me because if y satisfies the equation y = c ( t + 1 ) 1 at t = 1, then the solution will be just y = c ( t + 1 ) 1, c a constant.
And I believe my solution indeed makes sense because y = c ( t + 1 ) 1, c a constant is defined on R and differentiable, y = c for any t R . On the other hand, plugging this in to y + 1 t + 1 gives me c for any t R .
Would you explain what the handout is saying?

Answer & Explanation

Jaida Sanders

Jaida Sanders

Beginner2022-06-22Added 18 answers

Since the derivative d y d t is not defined at t = 1 then all that can be found is solutions of the differential equation on the intervals ( , 1 ) and ( 1 , + ) separately.

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