Question
Solve the following differential equation:
$\text{x}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}-\text{y}=2\sqrt{\text{y}^2-\text{x}^2}$

Answer

We have,
$\text{x}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}-\text{y}=2\sqrt{\text{y}^2-\text{x}^2}$
$\Rightarrow\ \frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{2\sqrt{\text{y}^2-\text{x}^2}+\text{y}}{\text{x}}$
This is a homogeneous differential equation.
Putting x = vy and $\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}=\text{v + x}\frac{\text{dv}}{\text{dx}}$, we get
$\text{v + x}\frac{\text{dv}}{\text{dx}}=\frac{2\sqrt{\text{v}^2\text{x}^2-\text{x}^2}+\text{vx}}{\text{x}}$
$\Rightarrow\ \text{v + x}\frac{\text{dv}}{\text{dx}}=2\sqrt{\text{v}^2-1}+\text{v}$
$\Rightarrow\ \text{x}\frac{\text{dv}}{\text{dx}}=2\sqrt{\text{v}^2-1}+\text{v}-\text{v}$
$\Rightarrow\ \text{x}\frac{\text{dv}}{\text{dx}}=2\sqrt{\text{v}^2-1}$
$\Rightarrow\ \frac{1}{2\sqrt{\text{v}^2-1}}\text{dv}=\frac{1}{\text{x}}\text{dx}$
Integrating both sides, we get
$\int\frac{1}{2\sqrt{\text{v}^2-1}}\text{dv}=\int\frac{1}{\text{x}}\text{dx}$
$\Rightarrow\ \int\frac{1}{2\sqrt{\text{v}^2-1}}\text{dv}=2\int\frac{1}{\text{x}}\text{dx}$
$\Rightarrow\ \log\Big|\text{v}+\sqrt{\text{v}^2-1}\Big|=2\log|\text{x}|+\log\text{C}$
$\Rightarrow\ \text{v}+\sqrt{\text{v}^2-1}=\text{Cx}^2$
Putting $\text{v}=\frac{\text{y}}{\text{x}}$, we get
$\therefore\ \frac{\text{y}}{\text{x}}+\sqrt{\frac{\text{y}^2}{\text{x}^2}-1}=\text{Cx}^2$
$\Rightarrow\ \text{y}+\sqrt{\text{y}^2-\text{x}^2}=\text{Cx}^3$
Hence, $\text{y}+\sqrt{\text{y}^2-\text{x}^2}=\text{Cx}^3$ is the required solution.

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

Find the intervals in which the following functions are increasing or decreasing.
$f(x) = 2x^3 - 12x^2 + 18x + 15$
Show that the vectors $\overrightarrow{\text{a}},\overrightarrow{\text{b}} \text{and}{\overrightarrow{\text{c}}}$ are coplanar $\overrightarrow{\text{a}} +\overrightarrow{\text{b}}, \overrightarrow{\text{b}}+\overrightarrow{\text{c}}\text{and} \overrightarrow{\text{c}} + \overrightarrow{\text{a}}$ are coplanar.
Show that $2\tan^{-1}\text{x}+\sin^{-1}\frac{2\text{x}}{1+\text{x}^2}$ is constant for $\text{x}\geq1,$ find that constant.
Evaluate the following integrals as limit of sum:
$\int\limits^{\frac{\pi}{2}}_{0}\cos\text{x dx}$
Verify Rolle's theorem for the following function on the indicated intervals
$f(x) = x^2 -4x + 3$ on $[1, 3]$
For each of the differential equations given in find the general solution: $\cos^2\text{x}\frac{\text{dy}}{\text{dx}}+\text{y}=\tan\text{x}\Big(0\leq\text{x}<\frac{\pi}{2}\Big)$
If $\text{A}=\begin{bmatrix}\text{ab}&\text{b}^2\\-\text{a}^2&-\text{ab}\end{bmatrix},$ show that $A^2 = 0$
A company sells two different products, $A$ and $B$. The two products are produced in a common production process, which has a total capacity of $500$ man-hours. It takes 5 hours to produce a unit of A and $3$ hours to produce a unit of B. The market has been surveyed and company officials feel that the maximum number of unit of A that can be sold is $70$ and that for B is $125$. If the profit is Rs. $20$ per unit for the product A and Rs. $15$ per unit for the product B, how many units of each product should be sold to maximize profit?
Find the equation of the sphere passing through the points $\text{(3,0,0), (1, -1, 0), (0, 0, -2)} $ and having the centre on the plane $3x + 2y + 4z =1.$
Differentiate the following function with respect to x:$(\log\text{x})^{x} + \text{x}^{\log\text{x}}.$