"what happened to the other constant of integration? The standard equation for exponential growth and decay starts and is derived like this: dPdt=kP dPP=kdt int dPP=int kdt ln|P|=kt+C I don't understand the left hand side at this point, isn't int 1xdx=ln|x|+C? Where did the constant of integration from the left integral go?"

tashiiexb0o5c

tashiiexb0o5c

Answered question

2022-09-10

what happened to the other constant of integration?
The standard equation for exponential growth and decay starts and is derived like this:
d P d t = k P
d P P = k d t
d P P = k d t
ln | P | = k t + C
I don't understand the left hand side at this point, isn't 1 x d x = ln | x | + C? Where did the constant of integration from the left integral go?

Answer & Explanation

Lily Travis

Lily Travis

Beginner2022-09-11Added 14 answers

When you integrate both sides, each has a constant - you'd get, for constants A,B:
d P P = k d t ln | P | + A = k t + B
Well, we can subtract A from both sides and define a constant C=B−A; then
ln | P | + A = k t + B ln | P | = k t + B A = k t + C
This combination of constants is often implicit in solving differential equations - you'll integrate on two sides and then just combine the constants on whichever side of the equation is more convenient.

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