jerelova24
New member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2019
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What is the DE of xsiny=e^(cx)
Well, sorry for abuse. I was just going with the zeroth derivative as it was presented.As given, that is not a differential equation so I don't know what tkhunny means by his last line.
We can, of course, differentiate the given expression with respect to x to get
\(\displaystyle \sin(y)+ xcos(y)y'= ce^{cx}\), a differential equation satisfied that expression.
Should be sin(y)+xcos(y)y′=cecx??xsin(y)+xcos(y)y′=cex
I'm still waiting for the answer to the question: What do you mean by this? There are a large number (in fact, an infinite number) of differential equations you can write where this is the solution.What is the DE of xsiny=e^(cx)
But what do you mean by this? The "zeroth derivative" of a function is just that function. In your original post you had the equation \(\displaystyle x sin(y)= e^{cx}\), an equality of two functions. I still don't understand what you want. Are you asking for an "anti-derivative, a function, f(x,y)= Constant, such that \(\displaystyle \frac{dF(x,y)}{dx}=x sin(y)- e^{cx}\).I was just going with the zeroth derivative as it was presented.
Over-thinking. It was an ill-formed question and I provided an similarly-motivated response. No rigor intended.But what do you mean by this? The "zeroth derivative" of a function is just that function. In your original post you had the equation \(\displaystyle x sin(y)= e^{cx}\), an equality of two functions. I still don't understand what you want. Are you asking for an "anti-derivative, a function, f(x,y)= Constant, such that \(\displaystyle \frac{dF(x,y)}{dx}=x sin(y)- e^{cx}\).