27.7 HIGHER-ORDER EQUATIONS
0. 2
0. 2
0. 4
0. 4
0. 6
0. 6
0. 8
0. 8
1. 0
1. 0
c
y
y
x
− 1. 0
− 0. 8
− 0. 6
− 0. 4
− 0. 2
− 0. 1
Figure 27.6 The isocline method. The cross lines on each isocline show the
slopes that solutions ofdy/dx=− 2 xymust have at the points where they
cross the isoclines. The heavy line is the solution withy(0) = 1, namely
exp(−x^2 ).
second calculational pointx 2. The integration of these equations by the methods
discussed in the previous section presents no particular difficulty, provided that
all the equations are advanced through each particular step before any of them
is taken through the following step.
Higher-order equations in one dependent and one independent variable can be
reduced to a set of simultaneous equations, provided that they can be written in
the form
dRy
dxR
=f(x, y, y′,...,y(R−1)), (27.82)
whereRis the order of the equation. To do this, a new set of variablesp[r]is
defined by
p[r]=
dry
dxr
,r=1, 2 ,...,R− 1. (27.83)
Equation (27.82) is then equivalent to the following set of simultaneous first-order
equations:
dy
dx
=p[1],
dp[r]
dx
=p[r+1],r=1, 2 ,...,R− 2 , (27.84)
dp[R−1]
dx
=f(x, y, p[1],...,p[R−1]).