alexbawuru
alexbawuru alexbawuru
  • 14-05-2017
  • Mathematics
contestada

form a differential equation if y=Ae^-4x+Be^-6x

Respuesta :

brookegallagher
brookegallagher brookegallagher
  • 14-05-2017
Assuming A and B are constants, the trick for forming a differential equation when the original equation contains e is to keep each term the same and multiply by the derivative of the exponent.

For example, if your original function is y = Aeˣ + Beˣ, then the derivative, y', would be: y' = (Aeˣ)*x' + (Beˣ)*x'.

Therefore, for your equation, y' = -4Ae⁻⁴ˣ + -6Be⁻⁶ˣ.

Hope this helps!

Answer Link

Otras preguntas

Conjugate the following verb parler, au présent: je​
The length of a shadow of a building is 75 feet when the sun is 56° above the horizon find the height of the building round your answer to the nearest 10th
In literature, a round character is a well-developed character. A round character has complex motivations and background. By contrast, a flat character has a si
Put the words in alphabetical order.
Is there a right answer to this question
What kind of events took place in the Roman "Circus"? Oboring political discussions an open market of trade O chariot races and staged battles O baseball
which function is the in inverse of f(x)=2x+3​
passes through (-1,-10), parallel to y -7
Which stakeholder register entry is inadequate
How many seconds are in 4 days?