alphatarget1
Diamond Member
yeah it's pretty pathetic, 1st semester calculus 😛
the problem is as follows: the equation y''+y'-2y=x^2 is called a differential equation because it involves an unknow function y and its derivatives y' and y". Find constants A, B and C such that the function y=Ax^2+Bx+C satisfies this equation.
here's the deal, i'm on chapter 3 and they aren't going to teach differential equations until chapter 7. I was thinking of putting y by itself and then get its derivatives (y' & y") but I don't know how that'd relate to the latter equation (y=Ax^2+Bx+C). We just learned power rule ,quotient rule and exponent rule and I have no clue how to do this
any help is appreciated 🙂
the problem is as follows: the equation y''+y'-2y=x^2 is called a differential equation because it involves an unknow function y and its derivatives y' and y". Find constants A, B and C such that the function y=Ax^2+Bx+C satisfies this equation.
here's the deal, i'm on chapter 3 and they aren't going to teach differential equations until chapter 7. I was thinking of putting y by itself and then get its derivatives (y' & y") but I don't know how that'd relate to the latter equation (y=Ax^2+Bx+C). We just learned power rule ,quotient rule and exponent rule and I have no clue how to do this
any help is appreciated 🙂