Decouple differential equations. I have a system of two Second Order differential equations r^2 ddot{r} - r^3(\dot{\varphi}^2 +\omega^2) =-GM

cubanwongux

cubanwongux

Answered question

2022-09-09

Decouple differential equations
I have a system of two Second Order differential equations
r 2 r ¨ r 3 ( φ ˙ 2 + ω 2 ) = G M
r φ ¨ + 2 r ˙ ( φ ˙ + ω ) = 0
which I am supposed to decouple using the conservation size ( φ ˙ + ω ) r 2 I have shown, that it is indeed a conservation size, as its derivation is r-times the second equation and therefore zero. However I don't know how this is supposed to help me decoupling the two equations.

Answer & Explanation

Willie Smith

Willie Smith

Beginner2022-09-10Added 18 answers

Step 1
r φ + 2 r ( φ + ω ) = 0 φ φ + ω = 2 r r
ln | φ + ω | = 2 ln [ r | + c
φ = C r 2 ω
r 2 r r 3 ( ( φ ) 2 + ω 2 ) = G M = r 2 r r 3 ( C r 2 ω ) 2 r 3 ω 2
r = r ( C r 2 ω ) 2 + r ω 2 G M r 2
d r d t = r = C 2 r 3 G M r 2 2 C ω r + 2 r ω 2
t = d r C 2 r 3 G M r 2 2 C ω r + 2 r ω 2 + c 1
Step 2
This integral can be analytically solved. This would be a arduous task, involving a quartic polynomial equation to be solved and then separating the polynomial fraction into four elementary fractions which are each integrable. Too long to be done here.
d φ d t = C r 2 ω d φ d r = ( C r 2 ω ) d r d t
d φ d r = ( C r 2 ω ) ( C 2 r 3 G M r 2 2 C ω r + 2 r ω 2 )
φ ( r ) = ( C r 2 ω ) ( C 2 r 3 G M r 2 2 C ω r + 2 r ω 2 ) d r
This is easy to integrate (expand and integrate each elementary term).
So, the problem is solved on parametric form :
- The explicit function φ(r)
- The implicit function t(r).
There is probably no closed form for the inverse function r(t).

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