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DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS.

CHAPTER I.

OF THE NATURE AND ORIGIN OF DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS.

1. WHAT is meant by a differential equation?

To answer this question we must revert to the fundamental conceptions of the Differential Calculus.

The Differential Calculus contemplates quantity as subject to variation; and variation as capable of being measured. In comparing any two variable quantities x and y connected by a known relation, e.g. the ordinate and abscissa of a given curve, it defines the rate of variation of the one, y, as referred to that of the other, x, by means of the fundamental conception of a limit; it expresses that ratio by a differential coefficient dy; and of that differential coefficient it shews how

da

to determine the varying magnitude or value. Or, again, condy sidering as a new variable, it seeks to determine the rate

dx

of its variation as referred to the same fixed standard, the variation of x, by means of a second differential coefficient day and so on. But in all its applications, as well as in its theory and its processes, the primitive relation between the variables x and y is supposed to be known.

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In the Integral Calculus, on the other hand, it is the relation among the primitive variables, x, y, &c. which is sought. In that branch of the Integral Calculus with which the student

B. D. E.

1

is supposed to be already familiar, the differential coefficient

dy

dx

being given in terms of the independent variable x, it is proposed to determine the most general relation between y and x. Expressing the given relation in the form

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In (1) we have a particular example of an equation in the expression of which a differential coefficient is involved. But instead of having as in that example expressed in terms of

dy

dx

x, we might have that differential coefficient expressed in terms of y, or in terms of x and y. Or we might have an equation in which differential coefficients of a higher order, d'y d3y dds, &c., were involved, with or without the primitive variables. All these including (1) are examples of differential equations. The essential character consists in the presence of differential coefficients.

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are seen to be differential equations, the latter of which contains, while the former does not contain, the primitive variables.

And thus we are led to the following definition.

DEF. A differential equation is an expressed relation involving differential coefficients, with or without the primitive variables from which those differential coefficients are derived.

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