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Differential equation

In mathematics, a differential equation is an equation that relates one or more unknown functions and their derivatives.[1] In applications, the functions generally represent physical quantities, the derivatives represent their rates of change, and the differential equation defines a relationship between the two. Such relations are common; therefore, differential equations play a prominent role in many disciplines including engineering, physics, economics, and biology.

Visualization of heat transfer in a pump casing, created by solving the heat equation. Heat is being generated internally in the casing and being cooled at the boundary, providing a steady state temperature distribution.

The study of differential equations consists mainly of the study of their solutions (the set of functions that satisfy each equation), and of the properties of their solutions. Only the simplest differential equations are soluble by explicit formulas; however, many properties of solutions of a given differential equation may be determined without computing them exactly.

Often when a closed-form expression for the solutions is not available, solutions may be approximated numerically using computers. The theory of dynamical systems puts emphasis on qualitative analysis of systems described by differential equations, while many numerical methods have been developed to determine solutions with a given degree of accuracy.

History edit

Differential equations came into existence with the invention of calculus by Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz. In Chapter 2 of his 1671 work Methodus fluxionum et Serierum Infinitarum,[2] Newton listed three kinds of differential equations:

 

In all these cases, y is an unknown function of x (or of x1 and x2), and f is a given function.

He solves these examples and others using infinite series and discusses the non-uniqueness of solutions.

Jacob Bernoulli proposed the Bernoulli differential equation in 1695.[3] This is an ordinary differential equation of the form

 

for which the following year Leibniz obtained solutions by simplifying it.[4]

Historically, the problem of a vibrating string such as that of a musical instrument was studied by Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Leonhard Euler, Daniel Bernoulli, and Joseph-Louis Lagrange.[5][6][7][8] In 1746, d’Alembert discovered the one-dimensional wave equation, and within ten years Euler discovered the three-dimensional wave equation.[9]

The Euler–Lagrange equation was developed in the 1750s by Euler and Lagrange in connection with their studies of the tautochrone problem. This is the problem of determining a curve on which a weighted particle will fall to a fixed point in a fixed amount of time, independent of the starting point. Lagrange solved this problem in 1755 and sent the solution to Euler. Both further developed Lagrange's method and applied it to mechanics, which led to the formulation of Lagrangian mechanics.

In 1822, Fourier published his work on heat flow in Théorie analytique de la chaleur (The Analytic Theory of Heat),[10] in which he based his reasoning on Newton's law of cooling, namely, that the flow of heat between two adjacent molecules is proportional to the extremely small difference of their temperatures. Contained in this book was Fourier's proposal of his heat equation for conductive diffusion of heat. This partial differential equation is now a common part of mathematical physics curriculum.

Example edit

In classical mechanics, the motion of a body is described by its position and velocity as the time value varies. Newton's laws allow these variables to be expressed dynamically (given the position, velocity, acceleration and various forces acting on the body) as a differential equation for the unknown position of the body as a function of time.

In some cases, this differential equation (called an equation of motion) may be solved explicitly.

An example of modeling a real-world problem using differential equations is the determination of the velocity of a ball falling through the air, considering only gravity and air resistance. The ball's acceleration towards the ground is the acceleration due to gravity minus the deceleration due to air resistance. Gravity is considered constant, and air resistance may be modeled as proportional to the ball's velocity. This means that the ball's acceleration, which is a derivative of its velocity, depends on the velocity (and the velocity depends on time). Finding the velocity as a function of time involves solving a differential equation and verifying its validity.

Types edit

Differential equations can be divided into several types. Apart from describing the properties of the equation itself, these classes of differential equations can help inform the choice of approach to a solution. Commonly used distinctions include whether the equation is ordinary or partial, linear or non-linear, and homogeneous or heterogeneous. This list is far from exhaustive; there are many other properties and subclasses of differential equations which can be very useful in specific contexts.

Ordinary differential equations edit

An ordinary differential equation (ODE) is an equation containing an unknown function of one real or complex variable x, its derivatives, and some given functions of x. The unknown function is generally represented by a variable (often denoted y), which, therefore, depends on x. Thus x is often called the independent variable of the equation. The term "ordinary" is used in contrast with the term partial differential equation, which may be with respect to more than one independent variable.

Linear differential equations are the differential equations that are linear in the unknown function and its derivatives. Their theory is well developed, and in many cases one may express their solutions in terms of integrals.

Most ODEs that are encountered in physics are linear. Therefore, most special functions may be defined as solutions of linear differential equations (see Holonomic function).

As, in general, the solutions of a differential equation cannot be expressed by a closed-form expression, numerical methods are commonly used for solving differential equations on a computer.

Partial differential equations edit

A partial differential equation (PDE) is a differential equation that contains unknown multivariable functions and their partial derivatives. (This is in contrast to ordinary differential equations, which deal with functions of a single variable and their derivatives.) PDEs are used to formulate problems involving functions of several variables, and are either solved in closed form, or used to create a relevant computer model.

PDEs can be used to describe a wide variety of phenomena in nature such as sound, heat, electrostatics, electrodynamics, fluid flow, elasticity, or quantum mechanics. These seemingly distinct physical phenomena can be formalized similarly in terms of PDEs. Just as ordinary differential equations often model one-dimensional dynamical systems, partial differential equations often model multidimensional systems. Stochastic partial differential equations generalize partial differential equations for modeling randomness.

Non-linear differential equations edit

A non-linear differential equation is a differential equation that is not a linear equation in the unknown function and its derivatives (the linearity or non-linearity in the arguments of the function are not considered here). There are very few methods of solving nonlinear differential equations exactly; those that are known typically depend on the equation having particular symmetries. Nonlinear differential equations can exhibit very complicated behaviour over extended time intervals, characteristic of chaos. Even the fundamental questions of existence, uniqueness, and extendability of solutions for nonlinear differential equations, and well-posedness of initial and boundary value problems for nonlinear PDEs are hard problems and their resolution in special cases is considered to be a significant advance in the mathematical theory (cf. Navier–Stokes existence and smoothness). However, if the differential equation is a correctly formulated representation of a meaningful physical process, then one expects it to have a solution.[11]

Linear differential equations frequently appear as approximations to nonlinear equations. These approximations are only valid under restricted conditions. For example, the harmonic oscillator equation is an approximation to the nonlinear pendulum equation that is valid for small amplitude oscillations.

Equation order and degree edit

The order of the differential equation is the highest order of derivative of the unknown function that appears in the differential equation. For example, an equation containing only first-order derivatives is a first-order differential equation, an equation containing the second-order derivative is a second-order differential equation, and so on.[12][13]

When it is written as a polynomial equation in the unknown function and its derivatives, its degree of the differential equation is, depending on the context, the polynomial degree in the highest derivative of the unknown function,[14] or its total degree in the unknown function and its derivatives. In particular, a linear differential equation has degree one for both meanings, but the non-linear differential equation   is of degree one for the first meaning but not for the second one.

Differential equations that describe natural phenomena almost always have only first and second order derivatives in them, but there are some exceptions, such as the thin-film equation, which is a fourth order partial differential equation.

Examples edit

In the first group of examples u is an unknown function of x, and c and ω are constants that are supposed to be known. Two broad classifications of both ordinary and partial differential equations consist of distinguishing between linear and nonlinear differential equations, and between homogeneous differential equations and heterogeneous ones.

  • Heterogeneous first-order linear constant coefficient ordinary differential equation:
     
  • Homogeneous second-order linear ordinary differential equation:
     
  • Homogeneous second-order linear constant coefficient ordinary differential equation describing the harmonic oscillator:
     
  • Heterogeneous first-order nonlinear ordinary differential equation:
     
  • Second-order nonlinear (due to sine function) ordinary differential equation describing the motion of a pendulum of length L:
     

In the next group of examples, the unknown function u depends on two variables x and t or x and y.

  • Homogeneous first-order linear partial differential equation:
     
  • Homogeneous second-order linear constant coefficient partial differential equation of elliptic type, the Laplace equation:
     
  • Homogeneous third-order non-linear partial differential equation, the KdV equation:
     

Existence of solutions edit

Solving differential equations is not like solving algebraic equations. Not only are their solutions often unclear, but whether solutions are unique or exist at all are also notable subjects of interest.

For first order initial value problems, the Peano existence theorem gives one set of circumstances in which a solution exists. Given any point   in the xy-plane, define some rectangular region  , such that   and   is in the interior of  . If we are given a differential equation   and the condition that   when  , then there is locally a solution to this problem if   and   are both continuous on  . This solution exists on some interval with its center at  . The solution may not be unique. (See Ordinary differential equation for other results.)

However, this only helps us with first order initial value problems. Suppose we had a linear initial value problem of the nth order:

 

such that

 

For any nonzero  , if   and   are continuous on some interval containing  ,   exists and is unique.[15]

Related concepts edit

Connection to difference equations edit

The theory of differential equations is closely related to the theory of difference equations, in which the coordinates assume only discrete values, and the relationship involves values of the unknown function or functions and values at nearby coordinates. Many methods to compute numerical solutions of differential equations or study the properties of differential equations involve the approximation of the solution of a differential equation by the solution of a corresponding difference equation.

Applications edit

The study of differential equations is a wide field in pure and applied mathematics, physics, and engineering. All of these disciplines are concerned with the properties of differential equations of various types. Pure mathematics focuses on the existence and uniqueness of solutions, while applied mathematics emphasizes the rigorous justification of the methods for approximating solutions. Differential equations play an important role in modeling virtually every physical, technical, or biological process, from celestial motion, to bridge design, to interactions between neurons. Differential equations such as those used to solve real-life problems may not necessarily be directly solvable, i.e. do not have closed form solutions. Instead, solutions can be approximated using numerical methods.

Many fundamental laws of physics and chemistry can be formulated as differential equations. In biology and economics, differential equations are used to model the behavior of complex systems. The mathematical theory of differential equations first developed together with the sciences where the equations had originated and where the results found application. However, diverse problems, sometimes originating in quite distinct scientific fields, may give rise to identical differential equations. Whenever this happens, mathematical theory behind the equations can be viewed as a unifying principle behind diverse phenomena. As an example, consider the propagation of light and sound in the atmosphere, and of waves on the surface of a pond. All of them may be described by the same second-order partial differential equation, the wave equation, which allows us to think of light and sound as forms of waves, much like familiar waves in the water. Conduction of heat, the theory of which was developed by Joseph Fourier, is governed by another second-order partial differential equation, the heat equation. It turns out that many diffusion processes, while seemingly different, are described by the same equation; the Black–Scholes equation in finance is, for instance, related to the heat equation.

The number of differential equations that have received a name, in various scientific areas is a witness of the importance of the topic. See List of named differential equations.

Software edit

Some CAS software can solve differential equations. These are the commands used in the leading programs:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dennis G. Zill (15 March 2012). A First Course in Differential Equations with Modeling Applications. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-1-285-40110-2.
  2. ^ Newton, Isaac. (c.1671). Methodus Fluxionum et Serierum Infinitarum (The Method of Fluxions and Infinite Series), published in 1736 [Opuscula, 1744, Vol. I. p. 66].
  3. ^ Bernoulli, Jacob (1695), "Explicationes, Annotationes & Additiones ad ea, quae in Actis sup. de Curva Elastica, Isochrona Paracentrica, & Velaria, hinc inde memorata, & paratim controversa legundur; ubi de Linea mediarum directionum, alliisque novis", Acta Eruditorum
  4. ^ Hairer, Ernst; Nørsett, Syvert Paul; Wanner, Gerhard (1993), Solving ordinary differential equations I: Nonstiff problems, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-3-540-56670-0
  5. ^ Frasier, Craig (July 1983). "Review of The evolution of dynamics, vibration theory from 1687 to 1742, by John T. Cannon and Sigalia Dostrovsky" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. New Series. 9 (1).
  6. ^ Wheeler, Gerard F.; Crummett, William P. (1987). "The Vibrating String Controversy". Am. J. Phys. 55 (1): 33–37. Bibcode:1987AmJPh..55...33W. doi:10.1119/1.15311.
  7. ^ For a special collection of the 9 groundbreaking papers by the three authors, see First Appearance of the wave equation: D'Alembert, Leonhard Euler, Daniel Bernoulli. - the controversy about vibrating strings 2020-02-09 at the Wayback Machine (retrieved 13 Nov 2012). Herman HJ Lynge and Son.
  8. ^ For de Lagrange's contributions to the acoustic wave equation, can consult Acoustics: An Introduction to Its Physical Principles and Applications Allan D. Pierce, Acoustical Soc of America, 1989; page 18.(retrieved 9 Dec 2012)
  9. ^ Speiser, David. Discovering the Principles of Mechanics 1600-1800, p. 191 (Basel: Birkhäuser, 2008).
  10. ^ Fourier, Joseph (1822). Théorie analytique de la chaleur (in French). Paris: Firmin Didot Père et Fils. OCLC 2688081.
  11. ^ Boyce, William E.; DiPrima, Richard C. (1967). Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems (4th ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 3.
  12. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Ordinary Differential Equation Order." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/OrdinaryDifferentialEquationOrder.html
  13. ^ Order and degree of a differential equation 2016-04-01 at the Wayback Machine, accessed Dec 2015.
  14. ^ Elias Loomis (1887). Elements of the Differential and Integral Calculus (revised ed.). Harper & Bros. p. 247. Extract of page 247
  15. ^ Zill, Dennis G. (2001). A First Course in Differential Equations (5th ed.). Brooks/Cole. ISBN 0-534-37388-7.
  16. ^ Chen, Ricky T. Q.; Rubanova, Yulia; Bettencourt, Jesse; Duvenaud, David (2018-06-19). "Neural Ordinary Differential Equations". arXiv:1806.07366 [cs.LG].
  17. ^ "dsolve - Maple Programming Help". www.maplesoft.com. Retrieved 2020-05-09.
  18. ^ "DSolve - Wolfram Language Documentation". www.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  19. ^ Schelter, William F. Gaertner, Boris (ed.). "Differential Equations - Symbolic Solutions". The Computer Algebra Program Maxima - a Tutorial (in Maxima documentation on SourceForge). from the original on 2022-10-04.
  20. ^ "Basic Algebra and Calculus — Sage Tutorial v9.0". doc.sagemath.org. Retrieved 2020-05-09.
  21. ^ "ODE". SymPy 1.11 documentation. 2022-08-22. from the original on 2022-09-26.
  22. ^ "Symbolic algebra and Mathematics with Xcas" (PDF).

Further reading edit

  • Abbott, P.; Neill, H. (2003). Teach Yourself Calculus. pp. 266–277.
  • Blanchard, P.; Devaney, R. L.; Hall, G. R. (2006). Differential Equations. Thompson.
  • Boyce, W.; DiPrima, R.; Meade, D. (2017). Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems. Wiley.
  • Coddington, E. A.; Levinson, N. (1955). Theory of Ordinary Differential Equations. McGraw-Hill.
  • Ince, E. L. (1956). Ordinary Differential Equations. Dover.
  • Johnson, W. (1913). A Treatise on Ordinary and Partial Differential Equations. John Wiley and Sons. In University of Michigan Historical Math Collection
  • Polyanin, A. D.; Zaitsev, V. F. (2003). Handbook of Exact Solutions for Ordinary Differential Equations (2nd ed.). Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/CRC Press. ISBN 1-58488-297-2.
  • Porter, R. I. (1978). "XIX Differential Equations". Further Elementary Analysis.
  • Teschl, Gerald (2012). Ordinary Differential Equations and Dynamical Systems. Providence: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-8328-0.
  • Daniel Zwillinger (12 May 2014). Handbook of Differential Equations. Elsevier Science. ISBN 978-1-4832-6396-0.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Differential equations at Wikimedia Commons
  • Lectures on Differential Equations MIT Open CourseWare Videos
  • Online Notes / Differential Equations Paul Dawkins, Lamar University
  • Differential Equations, S.O.S. Mathematics
  • Introduction to modeling via differential equations Introduction to modeling by means of differential equations, with critical remarks.
  • Mathematical Assistant on Web Symbolic ODE tool, using Maxima
  • Exact Solutions of Ordinary Differential Equations
  • Collection of ODE and DAE models of physical systems 2008-12-19 at the Wayback Machine MATLAB models
  • Notes on Diffy Qs: Differential Equations for Engineers An introductory textbook on differential equations by Jiri Lebl of UIUC
  • Khan Academy Video playlist on differential equations Topics covered in a first year course in differential equations.

differential, equation, confused, with, difference, equation, mathematics, differential, equation, equation, that, relates, more, unknown, functions, their, derivatives, applications, functions, generally, represent, physical, quantities, derivatives, represen. Not to be confused with Difference equation In mathematics a differential equation is an equation that relates one or more unknown functions and their derivatives 1 In applications the functions generally represent physical quantities the derivatives represent their rates of change and the differential equation defines a relationship between the two Such relations are common therefore differential equations play a prominent role in many disciplines including engineering physics economics and biology Visualization of heat transfer in a pump casing created by solving the heat equation Heat is being generated internally in the casing and being cooled at the boundary providing a steady state temperature distribution The study of differential equations consists mainly of the study of their solutions the set of functions that satisfy each equation and of the properties of their solutions Only the simplest differential equations are soluble by explicit formulas however many properties of solutions of a given differential equation may be determined without computing them exactly Often when a closed form expression for the solutions is not available solutions may be approximated numerically using computers The theory of dynamical systems puts emphasis on qualitative analysis of systems described by differential equations while many numerical methods have been developed to determine solutions with a given degree of accuracy Contents 1 History 2 Example 3 Types 3 1 Ordinary differential equations 3 2 Partial differential equations 3 3 Non linear differential equations 3 4 Equation order and degree 3 5 Examples 4 Existence of solutions 5 Related concepts 6 Connection to difference equations 7 Applications 8 Software 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editDifferential equations came into existence with the invention of calculus by Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz In Chapter 2 of his 1671 work Methodus fluxionum et Serierum Infinitarum 2 Newton listed three kinds of differential equations d y d x f x d y d x f x y x 1 y x 1 x 2 y x 2 y displaystyle begin aligned frac dy dx amp f x 4pt frac dy dx amp f x y 4pt x 1 frac partial y partial x 1 amp x 2 frac partial y partial x 2 y end aligned nbsp In all these cases y is an unknown function of x or of x1 and x2 and f is a given function He solves these examples and others using infinite series and discusses the non uniqueness of solutions Jacob Bernoulli proposed the Bernoulli differential equation in 1695 3 This is an ordinary differential equation of the form y P x y Q x y n displaystyle y P x y Q x y n nbsp for which the following year Leibniz obtained solutions by simplifying it 4 Historically the problem of a vibrating string such as that of a musical instrument was studied by Jean le Rond d Alembert Leonhard Euler Daniel Bernoulli and Joseph Louis Lagrange 5 6 7 8 In 1746 d Alembert discovered the one dimensional wave equation and within ten years Euler discovered the three dimensional wave equation 9 The Euler Lagrange equation was developed in the 1750s by Euler and Lagrange in connection with their studies of the tautochrone problem This is the problem of determining a curve on which a weighted particle will fall to a fixed point in a fixed amount of time independent of the starting point Lagrange solved this problem in 1755 and sent the solution to Euler Both further developed Lagrange s method and applied it to mechanics which led to the formulation of Lagrangian mechanics In 1822 Fourier published his work on heat flow in Theorie analytique de la chaleur The Analytic Theory of Heat 10 in which he based his reasoning on Newton s law of cooling namely that the flow of heat between two adjacent molecules is proportional to the extremely small difference of their temperatures Contained in this book was Fourier s proposal of his heat equation for conductive diffusion of heat This partial differential equation is now a common part of mathematical physics curriculum Example editIn classical mechanics the motion of a body is described by its position and velocity as the time value varies Newton s laws allow these variables to be expressed dynamically given the position velocity acceleration and various forces acting on the body as a differential equation for the unknown position of the body as a function of time In some cases this differential equation called an equation of motion may be solved explicitly An example of modeling a real world problem using differential equations is the determination of the velocity of a ball falling through the air considering only gravity and air resistance The ball s acceleration towards the ground is the acceleration due to gravity minus the deceleration due to air resistance Gravity is considered constant and air resistance may be modeled as proportional to the ball s velocity This means that the ball s acceleration which is a derivative of its velocity depends on the velocity and the velocity depends on time Finding the velocity as a function of time involves solving a differential equation and verifying its validity Types editDifferential equations can be divided into several types Apart from describing the properties of the equation itself these classes of differential equations can help inform the choice of approach to a solution Commonly used distinctions include whether the equation is ordinary or partial linear or non linear and homogeneous or heterogeneous This list is far from exhaustive there are many other properties and subclasses of differential equations which can be very useful in specific contexts Ordinary differential equations edit Main articles Ordinary differential equation and Linear differential equation An ordinary differential equation ODE is an equation containing an unknown function of one real or complex variable x its derivatives and some given functions of x The unknown function is generally represented by a variable often denoted y which therefore depends on x Thus x is often called the independent variable of the equation The term ordinary is used in contrast with the term partial differential equation which may be with respect to more than one independent variable Linear differential equations are the differential equations that are linear in the unknown function and its derivatives Their theory is well developed and in many cases one may express their solutions in terms of integrals Most ODEs that are encountered in physics are linear Therefore most special functions may be defined as solutions of linear differential equations see Holonomic function As in general the solutions of a differential equation cannot be expressed by a closed form expression numerical methods are commonly used for solving differential equations on a computer Partial differential equations edit Main article Partial differential equation A partial differential equation PDE is a differential equation that contains unknown multivariable functions and their partial derivatives This is in contrast to ordinary differential equations which deal with functions of a single variable and their derivatives PDEs are used to formulate problems involving functions of several variables and are either solved in closed form or used to create a relevant computer model PDEs can be used to describe a wide variety of phenomena in nature such as sound heat electrostatics electrodynamics fluid flow elasticity or quantum mechanics These seemingly distinct physical phenomena can be formalized similarly in terms of PDEs Just as ordinary differential equations often model one dimensional dynamical systems partial differential equations often model multidimensional systems Stochastic partial differential equations generalize partial differential equations for modeling randomness Non linear differential equations edit Main article Non linear differential equations A non linear differential equation is a differential equation that is not a linear equation in the unknown function and its derivatives the linearity or non linearity in the arguments of the function are not considered here There are very few methods of solving nonlinear differential equations exactly those that are known typically depend on the equation having particular symmetries Nonlinear differential equations can exhibit very complicated behaviour over extended time intervals characteristic of chaos Even the fundamental questions of existence uniqueness and extendability of solutions for nonlinear differential equations and well posedness of initial and boundary value problems for nonlinear PDEs are hard problems and their resolution in special cases is considered to be a significant advance in the mathematical theory cf Navier Stokes existence and smoothness However if the differential equation is a correctly formulated representation of a meaningful physical process then one expects it to have a solution 11 Linear differential equations frequently appear as approximations to nonlinear equations These approximations are only valid under restricted conditions For example the harmonic oscillator equation is an approximation to the nonlinear pendulum equation that is valid for small amplitude oscillations Equation order and degree edit The order of the differential equation is the highest order of derivative of the unknown function that appears in the differential equation For example an equation containing only first order derivatives is a first order differential equation an equation containing the second order derivative is a second order differential equation and so on 12 13 When it is written as a polynomial equation in the unknown function and its derivatives its degree of the differential equation is depending on the context the polynomial degree in the highest derivative of the unknown function 14 or its total degree in the unknown function and its derivatives In particular a linear differential equation has degree one for both meanings but the non linear differential equation y y 2 0 displaystyle y y 2 0 nbsp is of degree one for the first meaning but not for the second one Differential equations that describe natural phenomena almost always have only first and second order derivatives in them but there are some exceptions such as the thin film equation which is a fourth order partial differential equation Examples edit In the first group of examples u is an unknown function of x and c and w are constants that are supposed to be known Two broad classifications of both ordinary and partial differential equations consist of distinguishing between linear and nonlinear differential equations and between homogeneous differential equations and heterogeneous ones Heterogeneous first order linear constant coefficient ordinary differential equation d u d x c u x 2 displaystyle frac du dx cu x 2 nbsp Homogeneous second order linear ordinary differential equation d 2 u d x 2 x d u d x u 0 displaystyle frac d 2 u dx 2 x frac du dx u 0 nbsp Homogeneous second order linear constant coefficient ordinary differential equation describing the harmonic oscillator d 2 u d x 2 w 2 u 0 displaystyle frac d 2 u dx 2 omega 2 u 0 nbsp Heterogeneous first order nonlinear ordinary differential equation d u d x u 2 4 displaystyle frac du dx u 2 4 nbsp Second order nonlinear due to sine function ordinary differential equation describing the motion of a pendulum of length L L d 2 u d x 2 g sin u 0 displaystyle L frac d 2 u dx 2 g sin u 0 nbsp In the next group of examples the unknown function u depends on two variables x and t or x and y Homogeneous first order linear partial differential equation u t t u x 0 displaystyle frac partial u partial t t frac partial u partial x 0 nbsp Homogeneous second order linear constant coefficient partial differential equation of elliptic type the Laplace equation 2 u x 2 2 u y 2 0 displaystyle frac partial 2 u partial x 2 frac partial 2 u partial y 2 0 nbsp Homogeneous third order non linear partial differential equation the KdV equation u t 6 u u x 3 u x 3 displaystyle frac partial u partial t 6u frac partial u partial x frac partial 3 u partial x 3 nbsp Existence of solutions editSolving differential equations is not like solving algebraic equations Not only are their solutions often unclear but whether solutions are unique or exist at all are also notable subjects of interest For first order initial value problems the Peano existence theorem gives one set of circumstances in which a solution exists Given any point a b displaystyle a b nbsp in the xy plane define some rectangular region Z displaystyle Z nbsp such that Z l m n p displaystyle Z l m times n p nbsp and a b displaystyle a b nbsp is in the interior of Z displaystyle Z nbsp If we are given a differential equation d y d x g x y textstyle frac dy dx g x y nbsp and the condition that y b displaystyle y b nbsp when x a displaystyle x a nbsp then there is locally a solution to this problem if g x y displaystyle g x y nbsp and g x textstyle frac partial g partial x nbsp are both continuous on Z displaystyle Z nbsp This solution exists on some interval with its center at a displaystyle a nbsp The solution may not be unique See Ordinary differential equation for other results However this only helps us with first order initial value problems Suppose we had a linear initial value problem of the nth order f n x d n y d x n f 1 x d y d x f 0 x y g x displaystyle f n x frac d n y dx n cdots f 1 x frac dy dx f 0 x y g x nbsp such that y x 0 y 0 y x 0 y 0 y x 0 y 0 displaystyle begin aligned y x 0 amp y 0 amp y x 0 amp y 0 amp y x 0 amp y 0 amp ldots end aligned nbsp For any nonzero f n x displaystyle f n x nbsp if f 0 f 1 displaystyle f 0 f 1 ldots nbsp and g displaystyle g nbsp are continuous on some interval containing x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp y displaystyle y nbsp exists and is unique 15 Related concepts editA delay differential equation DDE is an equation for a function of a single variable usually called time in which the derivative of the function at a certain time is given in terms of the values of the function at earlier times Integral equations may be viewed as the analog to differential equations where instead of the equation involving derivatives the equation contains integrals 16 An integro differential equation IDE is an equation that combines aspects of a differential equation and an integral equation A stochastic differential equation SDE is an equation in which the unknown quantity is a stochastic process and the equation involves some known stochastic processes for example the Wiener process in the case of diffusion equations A stochastic partial differential equation SPDE is an equation that generalizes SDEs to include space time noise processes with applications in quantum field theory and statistical mechanics An ultrametric pseudo differential equation is an equation which contains p adic numbers in an ultrametric space Mathematical models that involve ultrametric pseudo differential equations use pseudo differential operators instead of differential operators A differential algebraic equation DAE is a differential equation comprising differential and algebraic terms given in implicit form Connection to difference equations editSee also Time scale calculus The theory of differential equations is closely related to the theory of difference equations in which the coordinates assume only discrete values and the relationship involves values of the unknown function or functions and values at nearby coordinates Many methods to compute numerical solutions of differential equations or study the properties of differential equations involve the approximation of the solution of a differential equation by the solution of a corresponding difference equation Applications editThe study of differential equations is a wide field in pure and applied mathematics physics and engineering All of these disciplines are concerned with the properties of differential equations of various types Pure mathematics focuses on the existence and uniqueness of solutions while applied mathematics emphasizes the rigorous justification of the methods for approximating solutions Differential equations play an important role in modeling virtually every physical technical or biological process from celestial motion to bridge design to interactions between neurons Differential equations such as those used to solve real life problems may not necessarily be directly solvable i e do not have closed form solutions Instead solutions can be approximated using numerical methods Many fundamental laws of physics and chemistry can be formulated as differential equations In biology and economics differential equations are used to model the behavior of complex systems The mathematical theory of differential equations first developed together with the sciences where the equations had originated and where the results found application However diverse problems sometimes originating in quite distinct scientific fields may give rise to identical differential equations Whenever this happens mathematical theory behind the equations can be viewed as a unifying principle behind diverse phenomena As an example consider the propagation of light and sound in the atmosphere and of waves on the surface of a pond All of them may be described by the same second order partial differential equation the wave equation which allows us to think of light and sound as forms of waves much like familiar waves in the water Conduction of heat the theory of which was developed by Joseph Fourier is governed by another second order partial differential equation the heat equation It turns out that many diffusion processes while seemingly different are described by the same equation the Black Scholes equation in finance is for instance related to the heat equation The number of differential equations that have received a name in various scientific areas is a witness of the importance of the topic See List of named differential equations Software editSome CAS software can solve differential equations These are the commands used in the leading programs Maple 17 dsolve Mathematica 18 DSolve Maxima 19 ode2 equation y x SageMath 20 desolve SymPy 21 sympy solvers ode dsolve equation Xcas 22 desolve y k y y See also editExact differential equation Functional differential equation Initial condition Integral equations Numerical methods for ordinary differential equations Numerical methods for partial differential equations Picard Lindelof theorem on existence and uniqueness of solutions Recurrence relation also known as difference equation Abstract differential equation System of differential equationsReferences edit Dennis G Zill 15 March 2012 A First Course in Differential Equations with Modeling Applications Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1 285 40110 2 Newton Isaac c 1671 Methodus Fluxionum et Serierum Infinitarum The Method of Fluxions and Infinite Series published in 1736 Opuscula 1744 Vol I p 66 Bernoulli Jacob 1695 Explicationes Annotationes amp Additiones ad ea quae in Actis sup de Curva Elastica Isochrona Paracentrica amp Velaria hinc inde memorata amp paratim controversa legundur ubi de Linea mediarum directionum alliisque novis Acta Eruditorum Hairer Ernst Norsett Syvert Paul Wanner Gerhard 1993 Solving ordinary differential equations I Nonstiff problems Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 3 540 56670 0 Frasier Craig July 1983 Review of The evolution of dynamics vibration theory from 1687 to 1742 by John T Cannon and Sigalia Dostrovsky PDF Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society New Series 9 1 Wheeler Gerard F Crummett William P 1987 The Vibrating String Controversy Am J Phys 55 1 33 37 Bibcode 1987AmJPh 55 33W doi 10 1119 1 15311 For a special collection of the 9 groundbreaking papers by the three authors see First Appearance of the wave equation D Alembert Leonhard Euler Daniel Bernoulli the controversy about vibrating strings Archived 2020 02 09 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 13 Nov 2012 Herman HJ Lynge and Son For de Lagrange s contributions to the acoustic wave equation can consult Acoustics An Introduction to Its Physical Principles and Applications Allan D Pierce Acoustical Soc of America 1989 page 18 retrieved 9 Dec 2012 Speiser David Discovering the Principles of Mechanics 1600 1800 p 191 Basel Birkhauser 2008 Fourier Joseph 1822 Theorie analytique de la chaleur in French Paris Firmin Didot Pere et Fils OCLC 2688081 Boyce William E DiPrima Richard C 1967 Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems 4th ed John Wiley amp Sons p 3 Weisstein Eric W Ordinary Differential Equation Order From MathWorld A Wolfram Web Resource http mathworld wolfram com OrdinaryDifferentialEquationOrder html Order and degree of a differential equation Archived 2016 04 01 at the Wayback Machine accessed Dec 2015 Elias Loomis 1887 Elements of the Differential and Integral Calculus revised ed Harper amp Bros p 247 Extract of page 247 Zill Dennis G 2001 A First Course in Differential Equations 5th ed Brooks Cole ISBN 0 534 37388 7 Chen Ricky T Q Rubanova Yulia Bettencourt Jesse Duvenaud David 2018 06 19 Neural Ordinary Differential Equations arXiv 1806 07366 cs LG dsolve Maple Programming Help www maplesoft com Retrieved 2020 05 09 DSolve Wolfram Language Documentation www wolfram com Retrieved 2020 06 28 Schelter William F Gaertner Boris ed Differential Equations Symbolic Solutions The Computer Algebra Program Maxima a Tutorial in Maxima documentation on SourceForge Archived from the original on 2022 10 04 Basic Algebra and Calculus Sage Tutorial v9 0 doc sagemath org Retrieved 2020 05 09 ODE SymPy 1 11 documentation 2022 08 22 Archived from the original on 2022 09 26 Symbolic algebra and Mathematics with Xcas PDF Further reading editAbbott P Neill H 2003 Teach Yourself Calculus pp 266 277 Blanchard P Devaney R L Hall G R 2006 Differential Equations Thompson Boyce W DiPrima R Meade D 2017 Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems Wiley Coddington E A Levinson N 1955 Theory of Ordinary Differential Equations McGraw Hill Ince E L 1956 Ordinary Differential Equations Dover Johnson W 1913 A Treatise on Ordinary and Partial Differential Equations John Wiley and Sons In University of Michigan Historical Math Collection Polyanin A D Zaitsev V F 2003 Handbook of Exact Solutions for Ordinary Differential Equations 2nd ed Boca Raton Chapman amp Hall CRC Press ISBN 1 58488 297 2 Porter R I 1978 XIX Differential Equations Further Elementary Analysis Teschl Gerald 2012 Ordinary Differential Equations and Dynamical Systems Providence American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 8328 0 Daniel Zwillinger 12 May 2014 Handbook of Differential Equations Elsevier Science ISBN 978 1 4832 6396 0 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Differential equation nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Ordinary Differential Equations nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Differential equations nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Differential Equation nbsp Media related to Differential equations at Wikimedia Commons Lectures on Differential Equations MIT Open CourseWare Videos Online Notes Differential Equations Paul Dawkins Lamar University Differential Equations S O S Mathematics Introduction to modeling via differential equations Introduction to modeling by means of differential equations with critical remarks Mathematical Assistant on Web Symbolic ODE tool using Maxima Exact Solutions of Ordinary Differential Equations Collection of ODE and DAE models of physical systems Archived 2008 12 19 at the Wayback Machine MATLAB models Notes on Diffy Qs Differential Equations for Engineers An introductory textbook on differential equations by Jiri Lebl of UIUC Khan Academy Video playlist on differential equations Topics covered in a first year course in differential equations MathDiscuss Video playlist on differential equations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Differential equation amp oldid 1222128896, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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