Homogeneous differential equation

A differential equation can be homogeneous in either of two respects.

A first order differential equation is said to be homogeneous if it may be written

where f and g are homogeneous functions of the same degree of x and y.[1] In this case, the change of variable y = ux leads to an equation of the form

which is easy to solve by integration of the two members.

Otherwise, a differential equation is homogeneous if it is a homogeneous function of the unknown function and its derivatives. In the case of linear differential equations, this means that there are no constant terms. The solutions of any linear ordinary differential equation of any order may be deduced by integration from the solution of the homogeneous equation obtained by removing the constant term.

History

edit

The term homogeneous was first applied to differential equations by Johann Bernoulli in section 9 of his 1726 article De integraionibus aequationum differentialium (On the integration of differential equations).[2]

Homogeneous first-order differential equations

edit

A first-order ordinary differential equation in the form:

 

is a homogeneous type if both functions M(x, y) and N(x, y) are homogeneous functions of the same degree n.[3] That is, multiplying each variable by a parameter λ, we find

 

Thus,

 

Solution method

edit

In the quotient  , we can let t = 1/x to simplify this quotient to a function f of the single variable y/x:

 

That is

 

Introduce the change of variables y = ux; differentiate using the product rule:

 

This transforms the original differential equation into the separable form

 

or

 

which can now be integrated directly: ln x equals the antiderivative of the right-hand side (see ordinary differential equation).

Special case

edit

A first order differential equation of the form (a, b, c, e, f, g are all constants)

 

where afbe can be transformed into a homogeneous type by a linear transformation of both variables (α and β are constants):

 

Homogeneous linear differential equations

edit

A linear differential equation is homogeneous if it is a homogeneous linear equation in the unknown function and its derivatives. It follows that, if φ(x) is a solution, so is (x), for any (non-zero) constant c. In order for this condition to hold, each nonzero term of the linear differential equation must depend on the unknown function or any derivative of it. A linear differential equation that fails this condition is called inhomogeneous.

A linear differential equation can be represented as a linear operator acting on y(x) where x is usually the independent variable and y is the dependent variable. Therefore, the general form of a linear homogeneous differential equation is

 

where L is a differential operator, a sum of derivatives (defining the "0th derivative" as the original, non-differentiated function), each multiplied by a function fi of x:

 

where fi may be constants, but not all fi may be zero.

For example, the following linear differential equation is homogeneous:

 

whereas the following two are inhomogeneous:

 
 

The existence of a constant term is a sufficient condition for an equation to be inhomogeneous, as in the above example.

See also

edit

Notes

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. ^ "De integraionibus aequationum differentialium". Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae. 1: 167–184. June 1726.
  3. ^ Ince 1956, p. 18

References

edit
edit