I read somewhere that a non-linear differential equation can
have one or more special solutions which are not obtainable by
standard methods like separation of variables. For example, if
y'=sqrt(1-y2 ) then y=±1 are special
solutions.
Is there any method to check whether a given non-linear equation
has such special soutions? Specifically, can it be proved that
there are no special solutions to y'=sqrt(1+y2
)?
David Loeffler
Perhaps the problem with separating the variables in the
former case is that to get it in the form:
dy/sqrt(1-y2 ) = dx
then you are potentially dividing through by 0. Specifically if
sqrt(1-y2 ) = 0 and y = ± 1 then there are
problems.
It is one of those interesting cases when you can know the
differential equation, set its initial condition at x = 0, and
yet not necessarily be able to know what y is for any x.
Specifically I think:
If dy/dx = sqrt(1-y2 ), and when x = 0 then y =
-1.
y = -1 for all x is clearly one solution
y = -cos x for all x is fine too
Also
y = -1 for (0 < = x < X)
y = -cos(x-X) for x > = X
is also perfectly good (for any positive X).
What's more it can start off doing the cos curve, keep going for
an indeterminate number of cycles and then suddenly (upon
reaching ±1) stay there for a while. It really just
behaves totally unpredictably whenever y2 is 1.
For the sqrt(1+y2 ) case I think there will be similar
problems if and when y = ±i, but no problems if you keep y
real.
Another example (the one I found when working out a differential
equation modelling a particle rolling down a hill) is:
[d2 y/dx2 ]2 = 144y
Obviously y = 0 (for all x) is good. But so is y = x4
. And these both have the same initial conditions - both y and
dy/dx are 0 at x = 0.
Michael