If y=ce^(2x)+De^(-2x) then show that y'' -4y = 0 ?

3 Answers
Aug 15, 2017

y''-4y=0

Explanation:

This is an inverse problem. Given a solution, find a candidate differential equation which has is as solution.

Assuming the differential equation is second-order linear homogeneous such as

c_1 y'' +c_2 y'+c_3 y =0

after substituting the solution we have

(4 c_1 - 2 c_2 + c_3) D_0 e^(-2 x) + C_0 (4 c_1 + 2 c_2 + c_3) e^(2 x)=0

This relationship must be true for all x so

{(4 c_1 - 2 c_2 + c_3=0),(4 c_1 + 2 c_2 + c_3=0):}

now solving for c_1,c_2 we obtain

c_1 = -c_3/4, c_2 = 0 so the differential equation is

-c_3/4 y'' +c_3 y =0 or

y''-4y=0

Aug 15, 2017

Refer to the Explanation.

Explanation:

We note that, the given eqn. y=Ce^(2x)+De^(-2x)......(1), contains

2 arbitrary constants.

Therefore, the reqd. Diff. Eqn. must be of Second Order.

To find it, we diif. (1) twice.

y=Ce^(2x)+De^(-2x) rArr dy/dx=(Ce^(2x))2+(De^(-2x))(-2), or,

dy/dx=2{Ce^(2x)-De^(-2x)},

:. (d^2y)/dx^2=d/dx[2{Ce^(2x)-De^(-2x)}],

=2[(Ce^(2x))(2)-(De^(-2x))(-2)],

rArr (d^2y)/dx^2=4[Ce^(2x)+De^(-2x)]=4y,

rArr (d^2y)/dx^2-4y=0, is the Desired Diff. Eqn.

Aug 15, 2017

y'' -4y = 0

Explanation:

We have:

y=ce^(2x)+De^(-2x) .... [A}

As others have indicated we are not solving a second order Differentiation Equation with constant coefficients, but rather forming one given the solution.

Recognizing the solution is that of a second order Differentiation Equation with constant coefficients we can instantly write down the appropriate DE.

The Auxiliary Equation that produced this solution would require two distinct real solution, m=2 and m=-2)

Hence the associated Auxiliary Equation would be:

(m-2)(m+2) = 0 => m^2-4 = 0

Hence the DE associated with this Auxiliary Equation is:

y'' + 0y'-4y = 0
y'' -4y = 0