so I am learning first order linear equation, and I am stuck in this problem
dy/dx - 2y = 3e^2x.
so we know that p = -2, Q = 3e^2x
the integrating factor is e^(integeral of -2) dx, which is e^-2x.
the next step is to multiply the integrating factor throughout the equation.
so we have (e^-2x * dy/dx) - (2y * e^-2x) = (3e^2x * e^-2x)
this is where I am stuck. what do I do next? The books says to recognize the left-hand side of the resulting equation as a derivative of a product... I dont understand...
anyone care to enlighten me on that part, and carry me through the rest to solve it?
dy/dx - 2y = 3e^2x.
so we know that p = -2, Q = 3e^2x
the integrating factor is e^(integeral of -2) dx, which is e^-2x.
the next step is to multiply the integrating factor throughout the equation.
so we have (e^-2x * dy/dx) - (2y * e^-2x) = (3e^2x * e^-2x)
this is where I am stuck. what do I do next? The books says to recognize the left-hand side of the resulting equation as a derivative of a product... I dont understand...
anyone care to enlighten me on that part, and carry me through the rest to solve it?