gabrielC06 gabrielC06
  • 03-04-2020
  • Mathematics
contestada

is y=x^3 a solution of the differential equation yy'=x^5+y

Respuesta :

LammettHash
LammettHash LammettHash
  • 16-04-2020

No; we have [tex]y=x^3\implies y'=3x^2[/tex]. Substituting these into the DE gives

[tex]3x^5=x^5+x^3[/tex]

which reduces to [tex]x^3=0[/tex], true only for [tex]x=0[/tex].

Answer Link

Otras preguntas

(MC)What was the main effect of the Jim Crow system? A. It undermined the civil rights that African Americans had gained during Reconstruction. B. It prevente
Convert the equation from Standard Form to Slope Intercept Form. Show all of your work using inverse operations. 8x + 4y = 16, show your work.
What is the answer to -7(-3n 2)?
Answer each question in four-five sentences. Why does Pope Urban II urge his audience to fight against the Turks? What language does he use to describe the cru
Large bodies of water near Jamestown
Between which two ordered pairs does the graph of f(x) = x2 + x – 9 cross the negative x-axis? Quadratic formula: x = (–6, 0) and (–5, 0) (–4, 0) and (–3, 0) (
The validity of punnet squares in determining the paternity for a child
Between 1820 and 1920 European indroduction to the east coast of the United States was where
What occurs when a magnesium atom becomes a magnesium ion?
Frank has a sample of steel that weighs 80 grams. If the density of his sample of steel is 8 g/cm3, what is the sample’s volume? The sample’s volume is cm3.