- Dec 24, 2004
- 2,583
- 0
- 0
I'm having a bit of trouble studying for my Linear Differential Equations course and would appreciate a bit of help with this concept...
What exactly does the Wronskian of two solutions of a second order linear differential equation say? I understand that there are two significant cases for the wronskian, W = 0 and W not = 0. What do each of these cases directly mean?
Can the wronskian only be applied to an ODE of the form y'' + p(t)y' + q(t)y = 0 or does it apply to r(t)y'' p(t)y' + q(t)y = g(t) as well?
Thanks.
What exactly does the Wronskian of two solutions of a second order linear differential equation say? I understand that there are two significant cases for the wronskian, W = 0 and W not = 0. What do each of these cases directly mean?
Can the wronskian only be applied to an ODE of the form y'' + p(t)y' + q(t)y = 0 or does it apply to r(t)y'' p(t)y' + q(t)y = g(t) as well?
Thanks.