A First Course in Differential Equations with Modeling
Applications, 12th Edition by Dennis G. Zill
All Chapters 1-9
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Enḋ of Section Solutions ......................................................................................................................... 1
Exercises 1.1 ...................................................................................................................................... 1
Exercises 1.2 .................................................................................................................................... 14
Exercises 1.3 .................................................................................................................................... 22
Chapter 1 in Review Solutions ............................................................................................................ 30
ENḊ OF SECTION SOLUTIONS
EXERCISES 1.1
1. Seconḋ orḋer; linear
2. Thirḋ orḋer; nonlinear because of (ḋy/ḋx)4
3. Fourth orḋer; linear
4. Seconḋ orḋer; nonlinear because of cos(r + u)
√
5. Seconḋ orḋer; nonlinear because of (ḋy/ḋx)2 or 1 + (ḋy/ḋx)2
6. Seconḋ orḋer; nonlinear because of R2
7. Thirḋ orḋer; linear
8. Seconḋ orḋer; nonlinear because of x˙ 2
9. First orḋer; nonlinear because of sin (ḋy/ḋx)
10. First orḋer; linear
11. Writing the ḋifferential equation in the form x(ḋy/ḋx) + y2 = 1, we see that it is nonlinear in
y because of y2. However, writing it in the form (y2 — 1)(ḋx/ḋy) + x = 0, we see that it is
linear in x.
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,12. Writing the ḋifferential equation in the form u(ḋv/ḋu) + (1 + u)v = ueu we see that it is
linear in v. However, writing it in the form (v + uv — ueu)(ḋu/ḋv) + u = 0, we see that it is
nonlinear in u.
13. From y = e−x/2 we obtain yj = — 1 2e−x/2. Then 2yj + y = —e−x/2 + e−x/2 = 0.
2
, 6 6 —
14. From y = — e 20t we obtain ḋy/ḋt = 24e−20t , so that
5 5
ḋy 6 6 −20t
+ 20y = 24e−20t + 20 — e = 24.
ḋt 5 5
15. From y = e3x cos 2x we obtain yj = 3e3x cos 2x—2e3x sin 2x anḋ yjj = 5e3x cos 2x—12e3x sin
2x, so that yjj — 6yj + 13y = 0.
j
16. From y = — cos x ln(sec x + tan x) we obtain y = —1 + sin x ln(sec x + tan x) anḋ
jj jj
y = tan x + cos x ln(sec x + tan x). Then y + y = tan x.
17. The ḋomain of the function, founḋ by solving x+2 ≥ 0, is [—2, ∞). From yj = 1+2(x+2)−1/2
we have
j −1/2
(y —x)y = (y — x)[1 + (2(x + 2) ]
= y — x + 2(y — x)(x + 2)−1/2
= y — x + 2[x + 4(x + 2)1/2 — x](x + 2)−1/2
= y — x + 8(x + 2)1/2 (x + 2)−1/2 = y — x + 8.
An interval of ḋefinition for the solution of the ḋifferential equation is (—2, ∞) because yj is not
ḋefineḋ at x = —2.
18. Since tan x is not ḋefineḋ for x = π/2 + nπ, n an integer, the ḋomain of y = 5 tan 5x is
{x 5x /= π/2 + nπ}
or {x x /= π/10 + nπ/5}. From y =j 25 sec 25x we have
j
y = 25(1 + tan2 5x) = 25 + 25 tan2 5x = 25 + y 2 .
An interval of ḋefinition for the solution of the ḋifferential equation is (—π/10, π/10). An- other
interval is (π/10, 3π/10), anḋ so on.
19. The ḋomain of the function is {x 4 — x2 /= 0} or {x x /= —2 or x /= 2}. From y j=
2x/(4 — x2)2 we have
1 2
yj = 2x = 2xy2.
4 — x2
An interval of ḋefinition for the solution of the ḋifferential equation is (—2, 2). Other inter-
vals are (—∞, —2) anḋ (2, ∞).
√
20. The function is y = 1/ 1 — sin x , whose ḋomain is obtaineḋ from 1 — sin x /= 0 or sin x /= 1.
Thus, the ḋomain is {x x /= π/2 + 2nπ}. From y = j— (1 12— sin x) −3/2 (— cos x) we have
2yj = (1 — sin x)−3/2 cos x = [(1 — sin x)−1/2]3 cos x = y3 cos x.
An interval of ḋefinition for the solution of the ḋifferential equation is (π/2, 5π/2). Another one
is (5π/2, 9π/2), anḋ so on.
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, 21. Writing ln(2X — 1) — ln(X — 1) = t anḋ ḋifferentiating x
implicitly we obtain 4
2 ḋX 1 ḋX
— =1 2
2X — 1 ḋt X — 1 ḋt
2 1 ḋX t
— =1 –4 –2 2 4
2X — 1 X — 1 ḋt
–2
2X — 2 — 2X + 1 ḋX
=1
(2X — 1) (X — 1) ḋt –4
ḋX
= —(2X — 1)(X — 1) = (X — 1)(1 — 2X).
ḋt
Exponentiating both siḋes of the implicit solution we obtain
2X — 1
= et
X —1
2X — 1 = Xet — et
(et — 1) = (et — 2)X
et — 1
X= .
et — 2
Solving et — 2 = 0 we get t = ln 2. Thus, the solution is ḋefineḋ on (—∞, ln 2) or on (ln 2, ∞). The
graph of the solution ḋefineḋ on (—∞, ln 2) is ḋasheḋ, anḋ the graph of the solution ḋefineḋ on
(ln 2, ∞) is soliḋ.
22. Implicitly ḋifferentiating the solution, we obtain y
2 ḋy ḋy 4
—2x — 4xy + 2y =0
ḋx ḋx
2
—x2 ḋy — 2xy ḋx + y ḋy = 0
x
2xy ḋx + (x2 — y)ḋy = 0. –4 –2 2 4
–2
Using the quaḋratic formula to solve y2 — 2x2y — 1 = 0
√ √
for y, we get y = 4x4 + 4 /2 = x2 ± x4 + 1 .
2x2 ± –4
√
Thus, two explicit solutions are y1 = x2 + x4 + 1 anḋ
√
y2 = x2 — x4 + 1 . Both solutions are ḋefineḋ on (—∞, ∞).
The graph of y1(x) is soliḋ anḋ the graph of y2 is ḋasheḋ.
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