MAT244-2013S > Quiz 3

Night Sections Problem 2

(1/1)

Victor Ivrii:
4.3 p 239, # 4

Find a particular solution and then the general solution of the following ODE
\begin{equation*}
y'''-y'= 2 \sin t .
\end{equation*}

Victor Lam:
General solution is the summation of the homogeneous and particular solutions. See attachment.

Rudolf-Harri Oberg:
We start by solving $r^3-r=0$ which gives that $r_1=0, r_2=1, r_3=-1$.
Variation of parameters is not a good method to guess a particular solution here. You can try guessing that the particular solution is $Y_p=A\sin(t)+B\cos(t)$ or just look at the equation and deduce that $Y_p=\cos(t)$

So, general solution to the equation is
$Y_G=\cos(t)+c_1+c_2e^t+c_3e^{-t}$.

Victor Ivrii:
Observing that the r.h.e. is an odd function and equation contains only odd derivatives we look for even solution: $y_p= A\cos(t)$ which makes easy problem even easier.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

Go to full version