Second-Order Non-Homogeneous Differential Equations 2 (KristaKingMath)

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  • Опубликовано: 6 янв 2025

Комментарии • 229

  • @kyshamwandawiro734
    @kyshamwandawiro734 6 лет назад +8

    You are the blessing I have been looking for all my life. Kenyan lecturers wouldn't care less whether you have understood or not. They move at their own pace, mostly quickly, to complete the curriculum without enquiring whether the students have understood or taking time to explain why and how each step comes about. Krista, you are truly an answered prayer.

  • @DasnarkyRemarky
    @DasnarkyRemarky 9 лет назад

    Oh my God you're such a lifesaver. I can't even begin to describe to you how much better i understand the inns and outs of 2nd order non homogenous differential equations because of you. Thank you so much. I'd be so lost without you.

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  9 лет назад

      DaSnarky Remarky I'm so happy to be able to help, and so glad that these problems are making more sense for you!

  • @Hash_aerospace
    @Hash_aerospace 11 лет назад

    Awesome! I'm doing my pre-engineering in the UK & the first part we call the complementary function, the second is called the particular integral, then you add them together which gives you the general solution,then if you are given initial conditions for x, y and dy/dx, you sub x and y values inside this to get your first equation for the simultaneous equation, Derive the general sol, plug your initial condition for dy/dx at the front and x and y, make another sim eqn. solve, & get part sol.

  • @MrPANICbutton
    @MrPANICbutton 13 лет назад +1

    There are a lot of different tutors on RUclips. I typically like to cycle through khanacademy, patrickjmt, and yours! It's nice because you all have different teaching tactics. What I like about yours the most is you take the time to thoroughly explain your topics. Especially where students get lost the most I feel, and you don't mind writing out the simple algebra steps that we all tend to mess up on. Your also very clean and organized, makes it easier to follow. Thanks for the videos!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад +1

    when we solved for r we found two solutions to the differential equation, r=-2 and r=-2. when you find two solutions with the same value, you have to include the extra x in the formula to distinguish the terms from one another, otherwise you won't be able to find the particular solution. if you get two solutions for r and the solutions are different, then you can use the same formula but without the extra x. hope that helps! :)

  • @musawwerrasheed994
    @musawwerrasheed994 11 лет назад

    You are a greatest teacher i have ever seen. If there were so many like you on this planet, this world would become a heaven. :)

  • @Alexward1352
    @Alexward1352 11 лет назад

    Apart from being fantastic looking, this helped me so much with my maths its not even funny. Paid 20 euro for a maths wizz to help me understand this and he couldn't..17mins and now I can fully do them myself. You're fantastic, thank you!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    I definitely will, thanks for watching!! :D

  • @jcnw92
    @jcnw92 3 года назад

    This is a great example. You explain things well with a calm voice. Thank you!

  • @zakpbarnes
    @zakpbarnes 11 лет назад

    missed 2 weeks of Diff E and have a test tomorrow morning over this material. this video and the first on the same subject have saved my tail. Thank you so much!

  • @duggan6592
    @duggan6592 12 лет назад

    This and Minute Physics are the two best channels on RUclips. Fair play.

  • @MisterBinx
    @MisterBinx 7 лет назад

    I fell a couple sections behind in this class. This video is saving me. You are the best Krista.

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    I always hated when steps were skipped, so I try not to. Thanks for the comment! :D

  • @KonnerScottMusic
    @KonnerScottMusic 12 лет назад

    This channel is incredibly helpful. Please keep up the fantastic work.

  • @J_Nino
    @J_Nino 12 лет назад

    Great video! Love that you take the time to explain your math. That's where most tutors lose me at times because they do the math in their head and I have to go back and figure out how they came up with something. Thank you!

  • @PhibeRCoRe
    @PhibeRCoRe 12 лет назад

    You are really gifted in transfering knowledge. Your explanation of things are amazing, I got it all. Thanks and keep doing these videos!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад +1

    That's so sweet of you! I'm glad it's helping! :)

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    If it's 0 on both sides then you don't have to worry about it. But if it's 0 on the left and you've got a sin3x on the right, then most likely there's something wrong with your particular solution, and you'll need to go back and try a different guess for y_p. Hope that helps! :)

  • @EWARTNEPHAWE
    @EWARTNEPHAWE 11 лет назад

    This world need someone like you.

  • @beverly6240
    @beverly6240 5 лет назад +1

    These series are so helpful, thank you so much!

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  5 лет назад

      You're welcome, Beverly, I'm so glad the videos are helping! :)

  • @ragnheiurtraustadottir9989
    @ragnheiurtraustadottir9989 9 лет назад

    A thousand times thank you for this video! I have a Calculus exam tomorrow and have been struggling with these non homogeneous equations all day, but now I completely understand it! I'm gonna subscribe so I can find your channel easily next time I have math problems :)

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  9 лет назад

      Ragnheiður Traustadóttir Hey that's awesome! I'm so glad the videos have been helping... this is definitely a tricky topic! Good luck on your exam tomorrow, I hope you do great!!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  13 лет назад

    @flexinou I got the correct answer, and I'm failing to see anything wrong with my steps. I don't know why you got different values.

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    no, because c_1 is multiplied by e^(-2x) and A is multiplied by cos(3x). if they were multiplied by the same thing, then you'd have a problem, and you'd have to do something fancier than A. :)

  • @edwinyeung3572
    @edwinyeung3572 9 лет назад +1

    Really helpful, clear and in-depth explanation. tysm!!! Keep doing more good stuff.

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  9 лет назад

      +Edwin Yeung You're welcome, glad I could help!

  • @jyamijuice9100
    @jyamijuice9100 7 лет назад

    Honestly this was so hard to learn until you came along. You are a light to first year engineering students!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  13 лет назад

    @pemulung You're welcome!! :D

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    No, I'm sorry... :( I haven't done any proof videos yet, but maybe in the future! :)

  • @ClerifyGames
    @ClerifyGames 9 лет назад

    I just learned this at school today, and you explain it waaay more better! Thanks a lot :D Subscribed!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    You might need to modify it depending on the left-hand side, but yes, that would be my first guess! :)

  • @xxjhones
    @xxjhones 12 лет назад +1

    What kind of program or thing you use to draw your graph and numbers while you teach. Iwould like to know if you dont' mind, I like it.

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    I'm so glad I could help! Thanks for the comment!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    Not yet! Sorry about that!! :(

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    It's called "Complex conjugate roots of second-order homogeneous differential equations". :)

  • @donogam
    @donogam 12 лет назад

    I thought it would be enough to just multiply the first part of particular solution with "x", but multiplying both cos & sin does explain the solution wolframalpha gives, so yes, it does help:) Thanks!

  • @iSKIPUNX
    @iSKIPUNX 12 лет назад

    You are a great teacher. Again, thank you for all the help. I just hope and pray that teachers here in the Phils. would teach us students as effective, patient, and kind as you do. :)

  • @jeffgettinger2917
    @jeffgettinger2917 11 лет назад

    Thank you very much for the in depth example, I am a math tutor and I know when I see a fantastic explanation. Thank you and great job.

  • @krishnaprio
    @krishnaprio 11 лет назад

    Thanx for the help !!! the world really needs people like u!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    It's sketchbook, and within that you just choose what image you want to draw on.

  • @peterh.1521
    @peterh.1521 7 лет назад +1

    It is a very helpful video of an example of second order non-homogeneous DE, thx for sharing Krista.
    /Peter

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    interesting! i've seen the different parts of this process called all different things, so it's hard to use standard language that matches for everybody. thanks for the info! :)

  • @kgfcccvvhbbbc7565
    @kgfcccvvhbbbc7565 3 года назад

    Thank you.. Krista. I use your knowledge for Schrodinger in quantum mechanic. I live in Thailand. Follow you always in utube. You great mathmatic. Thai teacher so kind.

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  3 года назад

      You're welcome, I'm honored to be able to help! :)

    • @kgfcccvvhbbbc7565
      @kgfcccvvhbbbc7565 3 года назад

      @@kristakingmath you beauty and so genius. So cute knowledge. Thailand likes you.

  • @aroonav5628
    @aroonav5628 11 лет назад

    definitely really organised and clear explanation. Happy to have found it !
    thank u !

  • @ProfessorTortoise
    @ProfessorTortoise 13 лет назад

    Hello there. =} I am actually taking differential equations this semester in college. This is chapter four of my book. =} great video! =}

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    You're welcome!! :) I'm using Sketchbook. It's pretty cool! :)

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    You're welcome! Glad I could help! :)

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    Awesome! So glad I could help! :)

  • @prakashchaudhary4559
    @prakashchaudhary4559 12 лет назад

    very clear and straight to the point. bravo

  • @AmeerAK95
    @AmeerAK95 10 лет назад

    My final is in two days and you saved me. Thank you ! :)

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  10 лет назад +1

      You're welcome! Good luck on your final!!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    you're welcome!! so glad you liked it! :D

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    You are so welcome! :)

  • @grandorottcod1
    @grandorottcod1 9 лет назад

    Hi, can you explain in more detail how do we guess what is the correct possible particular solution of the DE. For example, why did you add +Bsin3x

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    Aww that makes me so happy! I'm so glad the videos are helping make calculus a little easier. :)

  • @NazgulMoonblade
    @NazgulMoonblade 12 лет назад

    You wouldn't imagine how much this helped me!! Thanks!
    What kind of program are you using, I like it.

  • @mkusasakala3861
    @mkusasakala3861 10 лет назад

    Extremely helpfull as usuall!! what if i have the y' terms in my equation missing e.g y"+ y=f(x) should i treat such an equation as Second-Order Non-Homogeneous Differential Equation?

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    of course! anytime! :D

  • @Marmeladoffe
    @Marmeladoffe 8 лет назад +1

    What if instead of constants we have functions of x multiplying the derivatives and it is not a Euler/Cauchi differential equation? Do I use the same method to obtain the homogeneous solution?

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    I always hated when certain steps were skipped as well, so I do my best not to do the same. :) Glad you like my style!

  • @heat3
    @heat3 12 лет назад

    for y sub p....why the constant A and B ...don need to upgrade to Ax+C and Bx+C..thanks

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    I'm so sorry! I'm not familiar with that method, and I don't have a video on it. Wish I could be more help, but I'll keep my fingers crossed that your test goes great tomorrow!! :)

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    Glad I could help! :)

  • @BlissAden
    @BlissAden 9 лет назад

    you are a genius you just taught me a new way to get rid of the denominator thank you!
    say if the right hand side was equal to cosx? do I imagine there to be 1 x cosx? to work it out just as you done for 130?
    Then when you said A and B are constants so I assume you made it equal = 1 then you took the 3 from cos3x and ended up with -3Asin3x and 3Bcos3x is that right? you explain this round around 5:50 7:10. this is before solving a value for A and B
    looks to me you completely ignored the 130 in the beginning and you used it at the end. my problem is right hand side equals to cosx so do i assume that there is a (1)cosx to later work on the simultaneous equation?

  • @cerenalir9423
    @cerenalir9423 7 лет назад

    Great video thanks a lot :) what do we do when we have for example y(0) = 0.7 y'(0)=-11.8 will we used them to find c1 and c2 ?

  • @Edthebanjo
    @Edthebanjo 12 лет назад

    Have you got any videos where you do proofs...? such as proving that Ae^ax + Be^bx is the only possible general solution to a second order? Or showing how all why the solution is the general solution + a paticular integral?

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад +1

    Yay! What a relief! :D

  • @DelJuvePiero
    @DelJuvePiero 11 лет назад

    Just solved a problem I've been stuck on for three hours. Thanks!

  • @leemonastesse84
    @leemonastesse84 12 лет назад

    Great Video! I was wondering if you had a video on the annihilator method? I am struggling with it and have my test tomorrow! Thank you! From Arlington, TX

  • @angiegonzalez793
    @angiegonzalez793 7 лет назад

    For the last part, you could just use the second equation to set -12A = 5B to solve for B --> it takes a lot less time! :)

  • @jeanquinay4793
    @jeanquinay4793 8 лет назад

    what if i have tan (x) on the right hand side? what should be my particular sol'n? thanks. nice vid btw.

  • @Kevinrevenger
    @Kevinrevenger 9 лет назад +1

    Got a test tomorrow on this, i'm sure to score a B or A now thanks to you.

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  9 лет назад +1

      +Kevin Ramdial good luck! I hope you crush it. :)

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    Thanks!

  • @mawandemsi6606
    @mawandemsi6606 8 лет назад

    Ei your videos helped me a lot from maths 2 and i see they will also help me here in maths 3 wow! nice and helpful videos ma ccster

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  8 лет назад

      +Mawande Msi I'm happy to help, good luck in Math 3!

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  13 лет назад

    @ProfessorTortoise Thanks!! Good luck this semester... I'm sure you'll do great!! :D

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    You may need to multiply one of the terms in your general solution by x, as in this example: youtube(dot)com/watch?v=h3SCtTtlCKU. Doing so should prevent all your coefficients from canceling out. Hope that helps!! :)

  • @joshuarondon4092
    @joshuarondon4092 8 лет назад

    Krista King MY QUEEN THANK YOU!!!!!!

  • @miqdaadwalji
    @miqdaadwalji 11 лет назад

    one word.. PERFECT!! thanx a million

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    Hope you rocked your final! :)

  • @jonathancastillo1715
    @jonathancastillo1715 11 лет назад

    Do you have any videos on an auxilary example??

  • @jeremyho6139
    @jeremyho6139 8 лет назад +1

    U R A LIFE SAVER LADY !

  • @taiki1994
    @taiki1994 11 лет назад

    Great video, no mucking about and on point

  • @drcaligaridane
    @drcaligaridane 9 лет назад

    I have a test based on this 2 days from now and I was studying all alone and only fucking myself over it, watching your videos made it a lot easier. Thanks and keep up the good work.
    From a brazilian watcher :)

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  9 лет назад +1

      Ariss I'm so glad the videos were helpful, thanks for letting me know!

  • @maddy12318
    @maddy12318 11 лет назад

    Hey, your videos are awesome... I just had a quick question, what if the roots of the "r" equation are complex... Can you advice how to proceed in that case? Thanks in advance !

  • @charliewillson1005
    @charliewillson1005 10 лет назад

    integralCALC i need help with my calculus... can you integrate my natural log?

  • @krisitak
    @krisitak 12 лет назад

    Really cool! Thanks! I have a question. You write that (-9B - 12A + 4B)sin3x = 0.sin3x , because its missing in 130cos3x, but what if sin3x is 0, not (-9B - 12A + 4B) ?

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  11 лет назад

    Thanks for the kind words! :)

  • @orororororororo
    @orororororororo 11 лет назад

    great video, thank you very very much! :D.... one cuestion, how can i do it if i have sen^2(x)? how is the Yp?.... Again, thank you very much! :D

  • @donogam
    @donogam 12 лет назад

    Hi. Usually i dont have problems solving these kindo f equations, but came across one that which i dont see any logic in. It looks like this: y''+9y=6cos(3x)
    What i want to know is what you would choose as particular solution. I would go for : Acos(3x)+Bxsin(3x) - - - Which is wrong if you ask wolframalpha. Some1 that can explain me this one?

  • @NazgulMoonblade
    @NazgulMoonblade 12 лет назад

    I actually passed the test and I have you to thank!
    Do you know what the black tablet program is called?
    I use a program which makes it look I'm writing in a regular book, which is super boring.
    Thanks again!

  • @MrBiohazardboy
    @MrBiohazardboy 13 лет назад

    clear and precise, two thumbs up!

  • @heat3
    @heat3 12 лет назад

    but c sub 1 and A are constants won't they overlap each other?

  • @quartoano2973
    @quartoano2973 12 лет назад

    I didnt understand what you do in the right side (130cos(3x)), if you have (in my case) (e^(t)/t) can you tell me how do you do? i would appreciate it very much :)
    thx

  • @1982billiejoe
    @1982billiejoe 10 лет назад

    Why not use fequency response?
    a*x''+b*x'+c*x=q*cos(p*x)
    H(w) = 1/(-a*w^2+j*w*b+c)
    Great vids btw

  • @iSKIPUNX
    @iSKIPUNX 12 лет назад

    Your vid really helped me but i have some problem when i am solving for the general solution of the left hand side with imaginary numbers, what if you have an equation of y''+9=f(x). you would have r^2+9=0. then you would solve for "r" and have an imaginary number (-1)^1/2. in this case you would have r=+/-3i(imaginary). so in that case, how can i solve it ma'am?
    Thanks

  • @عمارالرجوب
    @عمارالرجوب 8 лет назад +3

    Thank beautifully explained
    can you explain this sol problem
    yًًًَََ2-6y1+9y=6x^2+2-12e^3x

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  8 лет назад +7

      When you deal with the left side you'll use the formula for equal real roots, since you end up with (r-3)(r-3). For the right side, your guess for the particular solution should start with Ax^2+Bx+C+De^(3x), but then you need to check for overlapping terms. I think you'll have an overlap with De^(3x), which means you would need to multiply by x to get Ax^2+Bx+C+Dxe^(3x), and I think it might still overlap again, which means you need to multiply by another x to get Ax^2+Bx+C+Dx^2e^(3x). I hope that helps!

    • @عمارالرجوب
      @عمارالرجوب 8 лет назад

      Krista King Thanks .Yes helped me

      Thank you so much

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    Awww thanks! Minute Physics is awesome! :)

  • @HUCERBH3947
    @HUCERBH3947 7 лет назад

    thank you for the good explanation but how you multiply the first eq by 2 and the other eq by 5????

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  7 лет назад

      You can always perform any operation to an equation, as long as you do it to both sides. For a random example, if you have the equation 2x=8, you can multiply both sides by 6, and make the equation 12x=48. Notice how it doesn't change the value of the equation, and you still solve to get x=4. So when I did that, I was multiply everything on both sides of the equation by the same value, so it didn't change the value of either equation. The reason I did it was so that I could get +60B and -60B, so that when I added the equations together, those terms would cancel.

  • @Ganamaha1
    @Ganamaha1 8 лет назад

    If you had say just cos3x instead of 130cos3x could you still sub A in front of the cos3x?

  • @grizzly_magnum9579
    @grizzly_magnum9579 8 лет назад +6

    You're videos on this topic are definitely the best ive seen. Thank you! On a side note, you are very pretty haha, makes these videos easier to watch :D

  • @achen94
    @achen94 10 лет назад

    Thanks for this great video! One thing that I am still confused about is how exactly you got the first Yp equation? "Yp=Acos(3x)+Bsin(3x). What if it wasn't a trig function how would you find Yp? Or if instead it was 130tan(3x) on the right side?
    Thanks

    • @Sherikovic
      @Sherikovic 10 лет назад

      Right at 5:32 she said that "If we didn't add that sin of 3x, we are gonna end up with the sin on the left hand side and no sin of 3x in the right hand side to equate it to"
      My guess is that because sin and cos are both phase shifted functions of each other, you have to add them both to lay out all the possibilities of all the solutions.

    • @achen94
      @achen94 10 лет назад

      lol thanks, i just took my differential equations exam last thursday, got an A in the class :D

    • @kristakingmath
      @kristakingmath  10 лет назад +1

      Andrew Chen Way to go Andrew!!! :D

    • @ArrowWaters
      @ArrowWaters 10 лет назад

      ***** integralCALC Andrew Chen So if tan3x was on the RHS would you need to add a sec^2(3x) for your particular solution or would you split it into sin3x/cos3x and do something else...?

  • @kristakingmath
    @kristakingmath  12 лет назад

    Awesome! That makes me happy. :)

  • @SerhiyKapustyan
    @SerhiyKapustyan 11 лет назад

    hi, tell me please. why do u have an "X" here:C1*exp(r1x)+C2*X*exp(r2x), i mean in previous formulas in was just C1*exp(r1x)+C2*exp(r2x), without an X after C2