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Reduction of Order

This document discusses methods for solving linear second-order differential equations, including: 1) The method of undetermined coefficients, which assumes the solution has the same form as the right-hand side for certain simple functions. 2) Variation of parameters, which looks for a solution as a linear combination of homogeneous solutions, solving for the coefficients. 3) Special cases that can arise and modifications to the methods, such as multiplying an assumed solution by t or t^2.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views24 pages

Reduction of Order

This document discusses methods for solving linear second-order differential equations, including: 1) The method of undetermined coefficients, which assumes the solution has the same form as the right-hand side for certain simple functions. 2) Variation of parameters, which looks for a solution as a linear combination of homogeneous solutions, solving for the coefficients. 3) Special cases that can arise and modifications to the methods, such as multiplying an assumed solution by t or t^2.

Uploaded by

Rabia akram
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Review

I For the linear equation with constant coefficients,

ay 00 + by 0 + cy = 0,

when the roots of the characteristic equation are equal, the


general solution is

y = Ae λt + Bte λt .

I For the linear homogeneous equation with


not-necessarily-constant coefficients, if we have one solution
u, we can find the general solution Au + Bvu using the
method of reduction of order.
I We look for a solution y = vu, and when we plug this into the
equation, the coefficients of v will cancel out and leave a
first-order equation for v 0 .
I Solve that equation, and then integrate to find v .
The non-homogeneous equation

Consider the non-homogeneous second-order equation with


constant coefficients:

ay 00 + by 0 + cy = F (t).

I The difference of any two solutions is a solution of the


homogeneous equation.
I Suppose we have one solution u. Then the general solution is
u plus the general solution of the homogeneous equation.
I Proof, let y be any solution. Then y − u solves the
homogeneous equation, so y = u+ a solution of the
homogeneous equation.
The non-homogeneous equation

I Suppose we have one solution u. Then the general solution is


u plus the general solution of the homogeneous equation.
I So, solving the equation boils down to finding just one
solution.
I But there is no foolproof method for doing that (for any
arbitrary right-hand side F (t)).
I We can do it in some useful common cases.
Constant coefficients or not?

I What we did up to now works for any second-order linear


equation.
I What we will do next assumes constant coefficients.
I Textbook does not emphasize the transition
The method of undetermined coefficients

This method applies to a second-order linear equation with


constant coefficients if the right-hand side F (t) has one of a few
particularly simple forms:
I A polynomial
I An exponential times a polynomial: e αt P(t). The exponent is
a constant times t.
I Complex exponentials are allowed, so we also can handle
P(t) cos t,
I P(t) sin t
I e αt cos t, etc.
Also the right-hand side can be a linear combination of expressions
of those forms, since if

au 00 + bu 0 + cu = F (t)

and
av 00 + bv 0 + cv = G (t)
then y = au + bv satisfies

ay 00 + by 0 + cy = aF (t) + bG (t)
The method of undetermined coefficients

I Assume that the sought-after solution y has the same form as


the right-hand side P(t).
I That assumption mentions some unknown coefficients.
I Plug in that solution to the differential equation and simplify
I You get equations for the coefficients.
I If they are solvable you are done.
Example: y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = 3e 2t

I 3e 2t is (a constant times) an exponential.


I Assume y = Ae 2t .
I Plug and grind:

y 0 = 2Ae 2t
y 00 = 4Ae 2t
y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = 4Ae 2t − 3(2Ae 2t − 4Ae 2t
= −6Ae 2t
= 3e 2t if this is to be a solution
1
A = − the equation is solvable, so it works.
2
Example: y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = 3e 2t
I We found the particular solution
1
y = − e 2t
2
I To find the general solution we need to solve the
homogeneous equation too.
I The characteristic equation is

λ2 − 3λ − 4 = 0

which has roots λ = 4 and λ = −1.


I So the general solution of the homogeneous equation is

ae 4t + be −t
I and the general solution of the non-homogeneous equation is
1
ae 4t + be −t − e 2t .
2
Special cases can cause trouble

I If the proposed solution of the non-homogeneous equation is


actually already a solution of the homogeneous equation, then
the equations for the coefficients cannot be solved.
I For example, in the preceding problem, the homogeneous
equation had solutions e −t and e 4t . What if the right-hand
side had been e 4t ?

y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = e 4t

I Then we would have assumed y = Ae 4t , but when we plug it


in, we get 0 on the left, which can never be equal to e 4t on
the right.
I So the method needs modification in such cases.
What to do in a special case
I If the proposed solution of the non-homogeneous equation is
already a solution of the homogeneous equation, then the
assumed form should be multiplied by a factor of t.
I For example:
y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = e 4t
Since e 4t is a solution of the homogeneous equation, we
instead assume
y = Ate 4t .
I Now we plug and grind:
y 0 = Ae 4t (4t + 1)
y 00 = Ae 4t (4 + 4(4t + 1)) = Ae 4t (16t + 8)
y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = Ae 4t (16t + 8) − 3Ae 4t (4t + 1) − 4Ate 4t
= −2Ae 4t
I So if we take A = −1/2 we have a solution.
I Note that the te 4t terms canceled out. That’s because e 4t
solves the homogeneous equation
Another special case

I If the right-hand side is already a solution of the homogeneous


equation, and
I if in addition the characteristic equation has double roots, then
I multiply by t 2 instead of only t.
I For example
y 00 + 2y 0 + 1 = e −t
I The characteristic equation is (λ + 1)2 = 0, so the
homogeneous equation has solutions e −t and te −t . So the
right side is a solution of the homogeneous equation, but so is
te −t (which we would otherwise try as a solution). So instead
we try
y = At 2 e −t
and you can check that it works.
Summary of the Method of Undetermined Coefficients

I It’s for linear non-homogeneous second-order equations with


constant coefficients.
I Assume a solution that has the same form as the right hand
side.
I That is, a polynomial, or an exponential or trig function times
a polynomial.
I Use letters for the polynomial coefficients and solve for them.
I Use an extra factor of t if the right side already solves the
homogeneous equation, or an extra factor of t 2 if in addition
the characteristic equation has multiple roots.
I For proof that it works, see pages 181-182 of the text. You
just use letters for the coefficients of the right-hand side and
plug and grind as you do when solving a particular example.
Variation of Parameters

I This method “works” on any second-order non-homogeneous


equation, constant coefficients or not.
I But the “solution” involves an integral, so it may be harder to
work with.
I Also it requires have a fundamental set of solutions of the
homogeneous equation, which may not be easy if the equation
doesn’t have constant coefficients.
I Therefore use the method of undetermined coefficients if it is
applicable.
Variation of Parameters

We consider the equation

y 00 + p(t)y 0 + q(t)y = g (t)

and suppose we have somehow found a fundamental set of two


solutions y1 and y2 of the homogeneous equation

y 00 + p(t)y 0 + q(t)y = 0.

The basic idea is to look for a solution in the form

y = uy1 + vy2

where u and v are not constants, but functions of t.


Variation of Parameters
Our plan is to plug
y = uy1 + vy2
into the equation

y 00 + p(t)y 0 + q(t)y = g (t)

So we start by differentiating y :

y 0 = u 0 y1 + uy10 + v 0 y2 + vy20

Now we assume u 0 y1 + v 0 y2 = 0. Then

y 0 = uy10 + vy20
y 00 = u 0 y1 + uy100 + v 0 y20 + v200
So now plug the expressions for y 0 and y 00 into the original
equation. Specifically, plug

y 0 = uy10 + vy20
y 00 = u 0 y1 + uy100 + v 0 y20 + v200

into
y 00 + p(t)y 0 + q(t)y = g (t)
The coefficient of u is y100 + py10 + qy1 , which is zero since y1 is a
solution of the homogeneous equation. The coefficient of v is
similarly zero since y2 is a solution. We are left with

u 0 y10 + v 0 y20 = g (t).


I We have proved that if we solve the equations

u 0 y1 + v 0 y2 = 0 which we assumed above


u 0 y10 + v 0 y20 = g (t)

then y = uy1 + vy2 will solve the non-homogeneous equation.


I But these are algebraic equations for u 0 and v 0 .
I The solution has the Wronskian W (y1 , y2 ) in the
denominator, which is nonzero.
I So it’s always possible to solve for u 0 and v 0 .
I Then if we can integrate the answers, we have our solution.
Solving
u 0 y1 + v 0 y2 = 0
u 0 y10 + v 0 y20 = g (t)
we get
y2 g
u0 = −
W
0 y1 g
v =
W
where W is the Wronskian
W = y1 y20 − y2 y10
Therefore a solution is
Z
y2 (t)g (t)
u=− dt + c1
W (t)
Z
y1 (t)g (t)
v= dt + c2
W (t)
y = uy1 + vy2
An example: y 00 + 4y = 3 csc t

I Although the coefficients are constant, the right side is not a


polynomial times an exponential.
I So we can’t use the method of undetermined coefficients.
I We can solve the homogeneous equation, since the
coefficients are constant.
I The details of this example are on pages 185-187, presented
as a motivation for the method of variation of parameters.
An example: y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = t 2
I What method should we use?
An example: y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = t 2
I What method should we use?
I Undetermined coefficients, since we have a polynomial on the
right.
I What form should we assume for the solution?
An example: y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = t 2
I What method should we use?
I Undetermined coefficients, since we have a polynomial on the
right.
I What form should we assume for the solution?
I y = a + bt + ct 2 . No exponential, since the right side is a
polynomial.
I Plugging this into the equation we find it will work if
2c − 3b − 4a = 0
−6c − 4b = 0
−4c = 1
I It is possible to solve these equations:
c = −1/4, b = 3/8, a = −13/32
I What is the general solution?
An example: y 00 − 3y 0 − 4y = t 2
I What method should we use?
I Undetermined coefficients, since we have a polynomial on the
right.
I What form should we assume for the solution?
I y = a + bt + ct 2 . No exponential, since the right side is a
polynomial.
I Plugging this into the equation we find it will work if
2c − 3b − 4a = 0
−6c − 4b = 0
−4c = 1
I It is possible to solve these equations:
c = −1/4, b = 3/8, a = −13/32
I What is the general solution?
13 3 t2
y =− + t− + Ae −t + Be 4t .
32 8 4

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