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Math 2280 - Final Exam: University of Utah Fall 2013

This 2-hour exam covers solutions to differential equations using various techniques like undetermined coefficients, converting to first-order systems, solving linear systems, convolutions, Laplace transforms, and power series solutions. The student is asked to show their work and partial credit may be given. Definitions of important concepts are also provided.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
120 views20 pages

Math 2280 - Final Exam: University of Utah Fall 2013

This 2-hour exam covers solutions to differential equations using various techniques like undetermined coefficients, converting to first-order systems, solving linear systems, convolutions, Laplace transforms, and power series solutions. The student is asked to show their work and partial credit may be given. Definitions of important concepts are also provided.
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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Math 2280 - Final Exam

University of Utah
Fall 2013

Name: Solutions by Dylan Zwick

This is a 2 hour exam. Please show all your work, as a worked problem
is required for full points, and partial credit may be rewarded for some
work in the right direction.

1
Things You Might Want to Know
Definitions
Z ∞
L(f (t)) = e−st f (t)dt.
0
Z t
f (t) ∗ g(t) = f (τ )g(t − τ )dτ .
0

Laplace Transforms
n!
L(tn ) =
sn+1
1
L(eat ) =
s−a
k
L(sin (kt)) = 2
s + k2
s
L(cos (kt)) = 2
s + k2
L(δ(t − a)) = e−as
L(u(t − a)f (t − a)) = e−as F (s).

Translation Formula
L(eat f (t)) = F (s − a).

Derivative Formula
L(x(n) ) = sn X(s) − sn−1 x(0) − sn−2 x′ (0) − · · · − sx(n−2) (0) − x(n−1) (0).

2
Fourier Series Definition
For a function f (t) of period 2L the Fourier series is:
∞     
a0 X nπt nπt
+ an cos + bn sin .
2 n=1
L L

L  
1 nπt
Z
an = f (t) cos dt
L −L L
1 L
 
nπt
Z
bn = f (t) sin dt.
L −L L

3
1. Basic Definitions (5 points)

(a) (3 points) State the order of the differential equation

ex y (3) − 2 sin (y) + 3x4 y ′ = ln x.

Solution - 3rd Order

(b) (2 points) Is the differential equation

(x + 1)y (2) + 2y = 0

linear or nonlinear?

Solution - Nonlinear

2. Undetermined Coefficients (5 points)


Use the method of undetermined coefficients to state the form of the
particular solution to the differential equation

y (3) − y ′′ − 4y ′ + 4y = x2 e2x sin (3x).

You do not have to solve for the coefficients, or solve the differential
equation.

Solution - (Ax2 + Bx + C)e2x sin (3x) + (Dx2 + Ex + F )e2x cos (3x).

4
3. Converting to a First-Order System (5 points)
Convert the differential equation

y (3) − y ′′ − 4y ′ + 4y = x2 e2x sin (3x).

into an equivalent system of first-order equations.

Solution -

y1′ = y2 ,
y2′ = y3 ,
y3′ = y3 + 4y2 − 4y1 + x2 e2x sin (3x).

4. Linear ODEs with Constant Coefficients (5 points)


Find the general solution to the homogeneous equation correspond-
ing to the differential equation

y (3) − y ′′ − 4y ′ + 4y = x2 e2x sin (3x).

Hint - One root of the polynomial r 3 − r 2 − 4r + 4 is r = 2.

Solution - The corresponding homogeneous equation is

y (3) − y ′′ − 4y ′ + 4y = 0.

The characteristic polynomial for this ODE is r 3 − r 2 − 4r + 4 =


(r − 1)(r + 2)(r − 2). This polynomial has roots r = 1, ±2. So, the
corresponding general solution is:

y(x) = c1 ex + c2 e2x + c3 e−2x .

5
5. Solving Systems of Linear ODEs (15 points)
Find the general solution to the system of ODEs

 
3 2 4
x′ =  2 0 2  x.
4 2 3

Hints - There are three linearly independent eigenvectors, and one of


the eigenvalues is 8.

Solution - The characteristic polynomial for the matrix is


3−λ 2 4
= −(λ − 8)(λ + 1)2 .

2 −λ 2

4 2 3−λ

So, the eigenvalues are λ = 8, −1, −1.

The eigenvector for λ = 8 is:

        
−5 2 4 a 0 a 2
 2 −8 2   b  =  0  ⇒  b  =  1 .
4 2 −5 c 0 c 2

For λ = −1 the eigenvectors are:


    
5 2 4 a 0
 2 1 2  b  =  0 
4 2 4 c 0
       
a 1 a 1
⇒  b  =  0 , or  b  =  −4 .
c −1 c 1

6
So, even though there is a repeated eigenvalue, we still have three
linearly independent eigenvectors, and our general solution is

     
2 1 1
x(t) = c1  1  e8t + c2  0  e−t + c3  −4  e−t .
2 −1 1

7
6. Convolutions and Laplace Transforms (10 points)
Find the inverse Laplace transform of the function

s
F (s) = .
(s − 3)(s2 + 1)

1 −3τ
Z
e−3τ cos (τ )dτ = sin (τ ) − 3e−3τ cos (τ ) .

Hint - e
10

Solution - The function F (s) is the product

  
1 s
2
= L(e3t )L(cos (t)).
s−3 s +1

The inverse Laplace transform of this product will be the convolu-


tion

Z t Z t
3t 3(t−τ ) 3t
e ∗ cos (t) = e cos (τ )dτ = e e−3τ cos (τ )dτ
0 0
3t  t

e −3τ −3τ
= e sin (τ ) − 3e cos (τ )
10 0
1
sin (t) − 3 cos (t) + 3e3t .

=
10

8
7. Power Series Solutions (15 points)
Use the power series method to find the first six terms (up to the x6
term) in a power series solution to the differential equation

3y ′′ + xy ′ − 4y = 0.

Solution - Setting our solution up as a power series


X
y(x) = cn xn
n=0

and plugging this into our differential equation we get


X ∞
X ∞
X
n−2 n
3 n(n − 1)cn x + ncn x − 4 cn xn = 0.
n=2 n=1 n=0

If we shift the first sum by 2, and note the second sum will be the
same if we begin at n = 0, we get


X
(3(n + 2)(n + 1)cn+2 + (n − 4)cn )xn = 0.
n=0

Applying the identity principle we get the recursion relation

4−n
cn+2 = cn .
3(n + 2)(n + 1)

For the even terms we get:

9
c0 = c0 ;
2
c2 = c0 ;
3
1 1
c4 = c2 = c0 ;
18 27
c6 = 0.

All higher even terms will also be 0. As for the odd terms we get:

c1 = c1 ;
1
c3 = c1 ;
6
1 1
c5 = c3 = c1 .
60 360

So, up to the x6 term our solution is

   
2 2 1 4 1 3 1 5
y(x) = c0 1 + x + x + c1 x + x + x +··· .
3 27 6 360

In case you’re curious, the general solution is

 
2 2 1 4
y(x) = c0 1 + x + x +
3 27 !

1 3 1 5 X (−1)n (2n − 5)!!x2n+1
c1 x+ x + x +3 n
.
6 360 n=3
(2n + 1)!3

10
8. Ordinary Points, Regular Singular Points, and Irregular Singular
Points (5 points)
Determine if the point x = 0 is an ordinary point, a regular singular
point, or an irregular singular point for the linear differential equa-
tion

x3 y ′′ − xy ′ + 4xy = 0.

Solution - We can rewrite this differential equation as

1 ′ 4
y ′′ − y + y = 0.
x2 x2

The coefficient functions P (x) = −1/x2 and Q(x) = 4/x2 are both
singular at x = 0, so it’s a singular point. The functions

1
p(x) = xP (x) = − ,
x
q(x) = x2 Q(x) = 4

are not both nonsingular at x = 0, as p(x) is singular. So, x = 0 is an


irregular singular point.

11
9. Endpoint Value Problems (10 points)
Find the eigenvalues and eigenfunctions corresponding to the non-
trivial solutions of the endpoint value problem

X ′′ (x) + λX(x) = 0,

X(0) = X(2) = 0.

Solution - If λ < 0 then our solution will be of the form

√ √
−λx
X(x) = Ae + Be− −λx
.

Plugging in our boundary values gives us

X(0) = A + B = 0 ⇒ A = −B,

and
√ √ √ √
X(2) = Ae2 −λ
+ Be−2 −λ
= A(e2 −λ
− e−2 −λ
) = 0.

If A 6= 0 then we must have

√ √
e2 −λ
= e−2 −λ
.

The only point where ex = e−x is at x = 0, and as λ < 0 this cannot


be the case. So, λ < 0 has no nontrivial solution.

If λ = 0 then the solution to the ODE is

X(x) = Ax + B.

12
If we plug in our boundayr values we get

X(0) = B = 0,

X(2) = 2A = 0 ⇒ A = 0.

So, there is no nontrivial solution, and λ = 0 is not an eigenvalue.

Finally, if λ > 0 the solution to the ODE is

√ √
X(x) = A cos ( λx) + B sin ( λx).

If we plug in our boundary values we get

X(0) = A = 0,

X(2) = B sin (2 λ) = 0.


If B 6= 0 we must have sin (2 λ) = 0. As sin (x) = 0 if x = nπ this
would imply

√ n2 π 2
2 λ = nπ ⇒ λ = .
4

So, the eigenvalues are

n2 π 2
λn = ,
4
and the corresponding eigenfunctions are
 nπx 
Xn (x) = sin .
2

13
10. Fourier Series (15 points)
Graph the odd extension of the function

f(x) =
I x 0<x<1
2—x 1<x<2

and find its Fourier sine series.

Solution -

The Fourier coefficients will be:

2 p
2
B=—
Jo
2
/
f(x)sin(___)dx=
2
nnx 12
i xs1n()+J (2_x)s1n()

1 2
/ 4 nrx’
2 /flltX\’\ /uirx\
= (—srn(————)—-——xcos(-———) I —-——cos(—-———) —

\ 2’ rin \ 2),/ nn \ 2)1


2
/ 4 nn . 2
—-——xcosj-—--—I
I —sill———)
\ 2 J 2 ‘1
nir ‘

4 2 n-ir’ 4 4 /fl7t’
—sin) —) — —cos)--— —cos(nn)+ —cosi —I +

n2it2 \2) nit \2J nit nit \21


4 4 ,‘nit” 2 nir
— cos (nit) + — sin ) — cos
nit ir
n
2 \2) nit
= — 8 . /nir
Sill I I =
I (—1)i (—-) n odd
ir
n
2 \21 1 0 neven

14
So, the Fourier sine series is

         
8 πx 1 3πx 1 5πx 1 7πx
sin − 2 sin + 2 sin − 2 sin +··· .
π2 2 3 2 5 2 7 2

15
11. The Heat Equation (10 points)
Find the solution to the partial differential equation

ut = 3uxx ,

u(0, t) = u(2, t) = 0,

x 0<x<1
u(x, 0) =
2−x 1≤x<2

Solution - We assume our solution is a separable equation

u(x, t) = X(x)T (t).

Plugging this into our differential equation we get

X(x)T ′ (t) = 3X ′′ (x)T (t)

T ′ (t) X ′′ (x)
⇒ = = −λ.
3T (t) X(x)

Where −λ is a constant by our standard argument. This means the


function X(x) must satisfy the differential equation

X ′′ (x) + λX(x) = 0,

with the endpoint conditions X(0) = X(2) = 0. As we saw derived


in Problem 9, this means X will be a function of the form
 nπx 
Xn (x) = sin ,
2
with corresponding eigenvalues

n2 π 2
λn = .
4
16
The function Tn must satisfy the differential equation

Tn′ (t) + 3λn Tn (t) = 0.

This differential equation has the solution

3n2 π 2
Tn (t) = Ce−3λn t = Ce− 4
t
.

The corresponding solutions to the PDE will be

 nπx  3n2 π 2 t
un (x, t) = An sin e− 4 .
2

We need to find coefficients An such that

∞ ∞  nπx  3n2 π 2
X X
u(x, t) = un (x, t) = An sin e− 4

n=1 n=1
2

satisfies

∞  nπx  
X x 0<x<1
u(x, 0) = An sin =
2 2−x 1≤x<2
n=1

on the interval 0 < x < 2. To do this, we take the odd extension of


u(x, 0), and find the corresponding Fourier coefficients for the odd
extension. We already did this in Problem 10, and the solution is

 n−1
8

(−1) 2
n2 π 2
n odd
An =
0 n even

17
So, our solution is

∞  
8 X n (2n + 1)π − 3(2n+1)2 π2 t
u(x, t) = 2 (−1) sin e 4
π n=0 2
    =   
8 πx − 3π2 t 1 3πx − 12π2 t 1 5πx − 75π2 t
sin e 4 − 2 sin e 4 + 2 sin e 4 −···
π2 2 3 2 5 2

18
12. Nonlinear Systems of ODEs (10 Points Extra Credit)
Find all the critical points of the system

dx
= y 2 − 1,
dt
dy
= x3 − y,
dt

and determine if each critical point is either stable or unstable.

Solution - The Jacobian matrix for this system of differential equa-


tions is

 
0 2y
J(x, y) = .
3x2 −1

The critical points will be:

y 2 − 1 = 0 ⇒ y = ±1;

x3 − y = 0 ⇒ x3 = y.

If y = 1 then x = 1, and if y = −1 then x = −1. So, the two critical


points are (1, 1) and (−1, −1).

As for the stability of these critical points, the values of our Jacobian
matrix at these points are

   
0 2 0 −2
J(1, 1) = , J(−1, −1) = .
3 −1 3 −1

The eigenvalues for these will be:

19

−λ
2 = λ(λ + 1) − 6 = λ2 + λ − 6 = (λ + 3)(λ − 2),

3 −1 − λ

so λ = 2, −3.

−λ −2 = λ(λ + 1) + 6 = λ2 + λ + 6,


3 −1 − λ
√ √
−1± 1−24 −1±i 23
so λ = 2
= 2
.

At (1, 1) we have two real eigenvalues of different sign, so it’s a sad-


dle point, which is unstable. At (−1, −1) we have complex eigenval-
ues with a negative real part, so we have a stable spiral point.

20

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