Can 2 different ODE's have the same set

Neveah Stewart

Neveah Stewart

Answered question

2022-03-17

Can 2 different ODE's have the same set of solutions?
If I have two differents linear ODE's:
x''+p(t)x'+q(t)x=f(t). p,qC(I,).

x''+j(t)x'+g(t)x=h(t). j,gC(I,).
Coul they have exactly the same set of solutions?
And if we have two different non-linear ODE's could they?

Answer & Explanation

pintorreeqwf

pintorreeqwf

Beginner2022-03-18Added 3 answers

Step 1
If your ODE's are x(n)=F(t,x,x,,x(n1)) and G(t,x,x,,x(n1)), for some F,G:Rn+1R and they both have local solutions for any initial conditions, then we must have F=G: if not, just take a value v=(t0,x0,x0,,x0(n1)) such that F(v)G(v) and then your local solution at v will be different in both equations, as both solutions will have different n-th derivatives.
Step 2
In the linear case, for the equations you give we would have the functions F(t,x,x)=p(t)xq(t)xf(t) and G(t,x,x)=j(t)xg(t)xh(t). So if they have the same solutions, we need F(t,x,x)=G(t,x,x);t,x,x, which implies p(t)=j(t),q(t)=g(t),f(t)=h(t): if for example p(t0)j(t0) for some t0, then F(t0,0,s)=sp(t0)f(t0) and G(t0,0,s)=sj(t0)h(t0), so F(t0,0,s) cannot be equal to G(t0,0,s);s, contradicting F=G. Similar arguments can be used to show q(t)=g(t) and f(t)=h(t).

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