Here it is:

\begin{equation} a\frac{dy}{dx} + by = c \end{equation}

For some constants a,b,c. The name is pretty obvious, because we have constants and the highest power on everything is 1. Its first-order because the derivative is only the first-order derivative. linear (diffeq) We technically call it “linear” because: if there are two possible solutions y_1(x) y_2(x), a linear combination Ay_1(x)+By_2(x) should also be a solution. Its “linear” because linear combinations work. solving separable differential equations A separable differential equation means that we can separate the derivative by itself and separate its two components. For the example above, we have that:

\begin{equation} \frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{c-by}{a} \end{equation}

We can naturally separate this:

\begin{equation} \frac{a}{c-by}dy = dx \end{equation}

And then we can finally take the integral on both sides:

\begin{equation} \int \frac{a}{c-by}dy = \int dx \end{equation}

Wait wait wait but why is this possible? Why is it that we can separate a \frac{dy}{dx} such that dy and dx is isolatable? Remember:

\begin{equation} \frac{dy}{dx} = \lim_{h\to 0} \frac{y(x+h)-y(x)}{h} \end{equation}

no where is the differentials seperatable! Apparently Ted’s undergrads didn’t know this either. So here’s a reading on it. What if its non-seperable? See Linear Non-Seperable Equation

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