Question
If $\text{x}=\sin\Big(\frac{1}{\text{a}}\log\text{y}\Big),$ show that $(1-\text{x}^2)\text{y}_2-\text{xy}_1-\text{a}^2\text{y}=0$

Answer

Here,
$\text{x}=\sin\Big(\frac{1}{\text{a}}\log\text{y}\Big),$
$\Rightarrow\frac{1}{\text{a}}\log\text{y}=\sin^{-1}\text{x}$
$\Rightarrow\text{y}=\text{e}^\text{a}\sin^{-1}\text{x}$
Differentiating w.r.t.x, we get
$\text{y}_1=\text{e}^{\text{a} \sin^{-1}\text{x}}\times\frac{\text{a}}{\sqrt{1-\text{x}^2}}$
$\Rightarrow\text{y}_1=\frac{\text{ay}}{\sqrt{1-\text{x}^2}}$
Differentiating w.r.t.x, we get
$\text{y}_2=\frac{\text{ay}_1\sqrt{1-\text{x}^2}+\frac{\text{x}\text{ay}}{\sqrt{1-\text{x}^2}}}{(1-\text{x}^2)}$
$\Rightarrow\text{y}_2=\frac{\text{ay}_1(1-\text{x}^2)+\text{xay}}{(1-\text{x}^2)\sqrt{1-\text{x}^2}}$
$\Rightarrow\text{y}_2=\frac{\text{ay}_1}{\sqrt{1-\text{x}^2}}+\frac{\text{xay}}{(1-\text{x}^2)\sqrt{1-\text{x}^2}}$
$\Rightarrow\text{y}_2=\frac{\text{a}^2\text{y}}{1-\text{x}^2}+{\frac{\text{xy}_1}{(1-\text{x}^2)}}$
$\Rightarrow(1-\text{x}^2)\text{y}_2-\text{xy}_1-\text{a}^2\text{y}=0$

Need a full question paper?

Generate a complete, print-ready paper with questions like this in minutes — across 16+ boards, with answer keys.

Start Generating Free

Similar questions

Using mean value theorem, prove that there is a point on the curve $y = 2x^2 - 5x + 3$ between the points $A(1, 0)$ and $B(2, 1),$ where tangent is parallel to the chord $AB$. Also, find that point.
Prove that the area the first quadeant enclosed by the x-axis, the line $\text{x}=\sqrt{3}\text{y}$ and the circle is $\frac{\pi}{3}$ .
Prove that if a plane has the intercepts a, b, c and is at a distance of p units from the origin, then $\frac{1}{\text{a}^2}+\frac{1}{\text{b}^2}+\frac{1}{\text{c}^2}=\frac{1}{\text{p}^2}.$
Find the distance of the point (-1, -5, -10) from the point of intersection of the line $\vec{\text{r}}=(2\hat{\text{i}}-\hat{\text{j}}+2\hat{\text{k}})+\lambda(3\hat{\text{i}}+4\hat{\text{j}}+2\hat{\text{k}})$ and the plane $\vec{\text{r}}\cdot(\hat{\text{i}}-\hat{\text{j}}+\hat{\text{k}})=5.$
Find the equation of the tangent to the curve $x^2 + 3y − 3 = 0,$ which is parallel to the line $y = 4x − 5.$
Find the intervals in which the following functions are increasing or decreasing.
$f(x) = 2x^3 - 24x + 107$
If $x=a \cos ^3 \theta, y=a \sin ^3 \theta$ then find $\left(\frac{d^2 y}{d x^2}\right)_{\theta=\frac{\pi}{4}}$
A dealer in a rural area wishes to purchase some sewing machines. He has only to invest and has space for at most 20 items. An electronic machine costs him 3,600 and a manually operated machine costs 2,400. He can sell an electronic machine at a profit of 220 and a manually operated machine at a profit of 180. Assuming that he can sell all the machines that he buys, how should he invest his money in order to maximise his profit? Make it as a LPP and solve it graphically.
Evaluate the following integrals:
$\int_{0}^\limits{\pi}\frac{\sin\text{x}}{\sin\text{x}+\cos\text{x}}\text{ dx}$
Show that the differential equation of $y' = \frac{{x + y}}{x}$, is homogeneous and solve it.