Final answer to the problem
Step-by-step Solution
How should I solve this problem?
- Choose an option
- Exact Differential Equation
- Linear Differential Equation
- Separable Differential Equation
- Homogeneous Differential Equation
- Integrate by partial fractions
- Product of Binomials with Common Term
- FOIL Method
- Integrate by substitution
- Integrate by parts
- Load more...
We can identify that the differential equation $\left(x^2+3y^2\right)dx-2xy\cdot dy=0$ is homogeneous, since it is written in the standard form $M(x,y)dx+N(x,y)dy=0$, where $M(x,y)$ and $N(x,y)$ are the partial derivatives of a two-variable function $f(x,y)$ and both are homogeneous functions of the same degree
Learn how to solve integration by trigonometric substitution problems step by step online.
$\left(x^2+3y^2\right)dx-2xy\cdot dy=0$
Learn how to solve integration by trigonometric substitution problems step by step online. Solve the differential equation (x^2+3y^2)dx-2xydy=0. We can identify that the differential equation \left(x^2+3y^2\right)dx-2xy\cdot dy=0 is homogeneous, since it is written in the standard form M(x,y)dx+N(x,y)dy=0, where M(x,y) and N(x,y) are the partial derivatives of a two-variable function f(x,y) and both are homogeneous functions of the same degree. Use the substitution: y=ux. Expand and simplify. Integrate both sides of the differential equation, the left side with respect to u, and the right side with respect to x.