Higher Engineering Mathematics

(Greg DeLong) #1

496 DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS


(iv) Maclaurin’s theorem from page 67 may be
written as:

y=(y) 0 +x(y′) 0 +

x^2
2!

(y′′) 0 +

x^3
3!

(y′′′) 0

+

x^4
4!

(y(4)) 0 + ···

Substituting the above values into Maclaurin’s
theorem gives:

y=(y) 0 +x(y′) 0 +

x^2
2!

{−2(y) 0 }

+

x^3
3!

{−3(y′) 0 }+

x^4
4!

{ 2 ×4(y) 0 }

+

x^5
5!

{ 3 ×5(y′) 0 }+

x^6
6!

{− 2 × 4 ×6(y) 0 }

+

x^7
7!

{− 3 × 5 ×7(y′) 0 }

+

x^8
8!

{ 2 × 4 × 6 ×8(y) 0 }

(v) Collecting similar terms together gives:

y=(y) 0

{
1 −

2 x^2
2!

+

2 × 4 x^4
4!


2 × 4 × 6 x^6
6!

+

2 × 4 × 6 × 8 x^8
8!

− ···

}
+(y′) 0

{

x−

3 x^3
3!

+

3 × 5 x^5
5!


3 × 5 × 7 x^7
7!

+ ···

}

i.e.y=(y) 0

{
1 −

x^2
1

+

x^4
1 × 3


x^6
3 × 5

+

x^8
3 × 5 × 7

− ···

}

+(y′) 0 ×

{
x
1


x^3
1 × 2

+

x^5
2 × 4


x^7
2 × 4 × 6

+···

}

The boundary conditions are that atx=0,y= 1

and

dy
dx

=2, i.e. (y) 0 =1 and (y′) 0 =2.

Hence, the power series solution of the differ-

ential equation:

d^2 y
dx^2

+x

dy
dx

+ 2 y=0 is:

y=

{
1 −

x^2
1

+

x^4
1 × 3


x^6
3 × 5

+

x^8
3 × 5 × 7

−···

}
+ 2

{
x
1


x^3
1 × 2

+

x^5
2 × 4


x^7
2 × 4 × 6

+···

}

Problem 6. Determine the power series solu-
tion of the differential equation:
d^2 y
dx^2

+

dy
dx

+xy=0 given the boundary con-

ditions that atx=0,y=0 and

dy
dx

=1, using
Leibniz–Maclaurin’s method.

Following the above procedure:

(i) The differential equation is rewritten as:
y′′+y′+xy=0 and from the Leibniz theorem
of equation (13), each term is differentiated n
times, which gives:

y(n+2)+y(n+1)+y(n)(x)+ny(n−1)(1)+ 0 = 0
i.e. y(n+2)+y(n+1)+xy(n)+ny(n−1)= 0
(15)
(ii) Atx=0, equation (15) becomes:

y(n+2)+y(n+1)+ny(n−1)= 0

from which, y(n+2)=−{y(n+1)+ny(n−1)}
This is therecurrence relationand applies for
n≥ 1
(iii) Substitutingn=1, 2, 3,...will produce a set of
relationships between the various coefficients.
For n=1, (y′′′) 0 =−{(y′′) 0 +(y) 0 }
n=2, (y(4)) 0 =−{(y′′′) 0 +2(y′) 0 }
n=3, (y(5)) 0 =−{(y(4)) 0 +3(y′′) 0 }
n=4, (y(6)) 0 =−{(y(5)) 0 +4(y′′′) 0 }
n=5, (y(7)) 0 =−{(y(6)) 0 +5(y(4)) 0 }
n=6, (y(8)) 0 =−{(y(7)) 0 +6(y(5)) 0 }
From the given boundary conditions, atx=0,

y=0, thus (y) 0 =0, and atx=0,

dy
dx

=1, thus

(y′) 0 = 1
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