Internal
problem
ID
[18178] Book
:
Elementary
Differential
Equations.
By
R.L.E.
Schwarzenberger.
Chapman
and
Hall.
London.
First
Edition
(1969) Section
:
Chapter
3.
Solutions
of
first-order
equations.
Exercises
at
page
47 Problem
number
:
3
(iii) Date
solved
:
Thursday, December 19, 2024 at 01:52:17 PM CAS
classification
:
[[_homogeneous, `class A`], _dAlembert]
An ode of the form \(x' = \frac {M(t,x)}{N(t,x)}\) is called homogeneous if the functions \(M(t,x)\) and \(N(t,x)\) are both homogeneous
functions and of the same order. Recall that a function \(f(t,x)\) is homogeneous of order \(n\) if
\[ f(t^n t, t^n x)= t^n f(t,x) \]
In this
case, it can be seen that both \(M=\cos \left (\frac {x}{t}\right )\) and \(N=1\) are both homogeneous and of the same order \(n=0\). Therefore
this is a homogeneous ode. Since this ode is homogeneous, it is converted to separable ODE
using the substitution \(u=\frac {x}{t}\), or \(x=ut\). Hence
We now need to find the singular solutions, these are found by finding for what values \(g(u)\) is
zero, since we had to divide by this above. Solving \(g(u)=0\) or \(\cos \left (u \right )-u=0\) for \(u \left (t \right )\) gives
Now we go over each such singular solution and check if it verifies the ode itself and
any initial conditions given. If it does not then the singular solution will not be
used.
The solution \(\operatorname {RootOf}\left (-\cos \left (\textit {\_Z} \right )+\textit {\_Z} \right )\) will not be used
Which is now solved The ode \(u^{\prime }\left (t \right ) = -\frac {u \left (t \right )-\cos \left (u \left (t \right )\right )}{t}\) is separable as it can be written as
We now need to find the singular solutions, these are found by finding for what values \(g(u)\) is
zero, since we had to divide by this above. Solving \(g(u)=0\) or \(-u +\cos \left (u \right )=0\) for \(u \left (t \right )\) gives
Now we go over each such singular solution and check if it verifies the ode itself and
any initial conditions given. If it does not then the singular solution will not be
used.
The solution \(\operatorname {RootOf}\left (-\cos \left (\textit {\_Z} \right )+\textit {\_Z} \right )\) will not be used
The ode \(u^{\prime }\left (t \right ) = -\frac {u \left (t \right )-\cos \left (u \left (t \right )\right )}{t}\) is
separable as it can be written as
We now need to find the singular solutions, these are found by finding for what values \(g(u)\) is
zero, since we had to divide by this above. Solving \(g(u)=0\) or \(-u +\cos \left (u \right )=0\) for \(u \left (t \right )\) gives
Now we go over each such singular solution and check if it verifies the ode itself and
any initial conditions given. If it does not then the singular solution will not be
used.
The solution \(\operatorname {RootOf}\left (-\cos \left (\textit {\_Z} \right )+\textit {\_Z} \right )\) will not be used
Substituting the above solution in the anstaz (1E,2E) (using \(1\) as arbitrary value for any
unknown in the RHS) gives
\begin{align*}
\xi &= t \\
\eta &= x \\
\end{align*}
The next step is to determine the canonical coordinates \(R,S\). The
canonical coordinates map \(\left ( t,x\right ) \to \left ( R,S \right )\) where \(\left ( R,S \right )\) are the canonical coordinates which make the original ode
become a quadrature and hence solved by integration.
The characteristic pde which is used to find the canonical coordinates is
The above comes from the requirements that \(\left ( \xi \frac {\partial }{\partial t} + \eta \frac {\partial }{\partial x}\right ) S(t,x) = 1\). Starting with the first pair of ode’s in (1)
gives an ode to solve for the independent variable \(R\) in the canonical coordinates, where \(S(R)\).
Therefore
Where the constant of integration is set to zero as we just need one solution. Now that \(R,S\) are
found, we need to setup the ode in these coordinates. This is done by evaluating
We now need to express the RHS as function of \(R\) only. This is done by solving for \(t,x\) in terms of
\(R,S\) from the result obtained earlier and simplifying. This gives
The above is a quadrature ode. This is the whole point of Lie symmetry method. It converts
an ode, no matter how complicated it is, to one that can be solved by integration when the
ode is in the canonical coordiates \(R,S\).
Since the ode has the form \(\frac {d}{d R}S \left (R \right )=f(R)\), then we only need to integrate \(f(R)\).
This ODE is now solved for \(p \left (t \right )\). No inversion is needed. The ode \(p^{\prime }\left (t \right ) = -\frac {\left (p \left (t \right )-\arccos \left (p \left (t \right )\right )\right ) \sqrt {-p \left (t \right )^{2}+1}}{t}\) is separable as it can be
written as
We now need to find the singular solutions, these are found by finding for what values \(g(p)\) is
zero, since we had to divide by this above. Solving \(g(p)=0\) or \(\left (p -\arccos \left (p \right )\right ) \sqrt {-p^{2}+1}=0\) for \(p \left (t \right )\) gives
\begin{align*} p \left (t \right )&=-1\\ p \left (t \right )&=1\\ p \left (t \right )&=\operatorname {RootOf}\left (-\cos \left (\textit {\_Z} \right )+\textit {\_Z} \right ) \end{align*}
Now we go over each such singular solution and check if it verifies the ode itself and
any initial conditions given. If it does not then the singular solution will not be
used.
The solution \(\operatorname {RootOf}\left (-\cos \left (\textit {\_Z} \right )+\textit {\_Z} \right )\) will not be used
`Methodsfor first order ODEs:---Trying classification methods ---tryinga quadraturetrying1st order lineartryingBernoullitryingseparabletryinginverse lineartryinghomogeneous types:tryinghomogeneous D<-homogeneous successful`