Engineering and Applied Science Letter
ISSN: 2617-9709 (Online) 2617-9695 (Print)
DOI: 10.30538/psrp-easl2021.0077
Gallery of integrating factors for non-linear first-order differential equations
Albert Adu-Sackey, Gabriel Obed Fosu\(^1\), Buckman Akuffo
Department of Applied Mathematics, Koforidua Technical University, Ghana.; (A.A.S & B.A)
Department of Mathematics, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana.; (G.O.F)
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction and preliminaries
The extreme challenge in finding an integrating factor of a simple or complex form, for a non-exact differential equation is borne out of solving a partial differential equation base on certain conditionality imposed on the ordinary differential equation (ODE) to transform it into an exact type. The snappy introduction of partial differential equation in the study of ordinary differential equations may pose some difficulty [1] of a sort to people who may only be taking the course briefly and may not advance or stray into the study of calculus of several variables, mathematical methods, integral equations, and specialized fields like special functions of mathematical physics, thermodynamics, and quantum mechanics. These advanced areas require a grave deal of useful repertoire of the methods or the techniques that provides a complete procedure for solving mercenaries of differential equations [2,3,4]. For instance, the functions that are usually classified as special functions of mathematical physics are all characterized by second-order differential equations and are implicit in the use of transforming their forms into exactness, leading to the derivation of their orthogonal properties by the application of certain integrating factor.
The use of an integrating factor has the advantage that is susceptible in the handling of most ordinary differential equations. In literature and for practical reasons, simple integrating factors involving a single variable could routinely be found [5]. This makes it possible for the non-exact differential equation to become solvable [6], so that the limitation or difficulty of having to deal with the partial differential equation in order to extract the possible integrating factor(s) from is completely taking care of. This fact makes it unattractive and a quick avenue for the subject matter to be touched on and short-lived in favor of the other aspects of the study of ordinary differential equations. Such intervention and notion may rather put readers at a disadvantage in general for two main reasons.
The first being that, readers may run along with the idea that once a first order non-linear equation is seen not to be exact nor meet the litmus test of the known types with their tailored appropriate methods that go with them, in the determination of their respective solutions, then one can always obtain an integrating factor in a single variable only or for want of a better word, by inspection [5,7], the entire equation is re-arranged into an integral form and the solution deduced without fully giving such method the in-depth attention it fully deserves as is often the case.
Secondly, the passion for a possible extension for the subject matter especially for integrating factors in two or more variables as well as the development of such techniques for higher-order differential equations may be completely incomprehensible or out of reach, even though quiet an extensive work has been done by earlier writers, particularly in the reduction of higher orders of ordinary differential equations under symmetric considerations [8,9]. The interesting aspect of the use of symmetric conditions for systems of ordinary or partial differential equation is that they tell much about the closed-form or analytic solvability of the system without having to routinely solve it in advance [1,10]. In contrast, this parallels the approach for the determination of integrating factors, in the sense that if there exist infinitely many integrating factors to the same non-exact differential equation, then its general solution may be obtained in terms of any two of such functions expressed as a direct proportion without actually solving the given differential equation.
An integrating factor is guaranteed to exist provided the given differential equation is solvable and in fact the general conditions of existence of integrating factors are derived under the theory of Lie group and Lie symmetries [1,11,12]. Once such a function is determined and applied, the exact equation now obtain, play out as a total derivative [13] of some appropriate function referred to as the potential function [14,15]. The resulting general solution from this procedure is implicitly [5] defined and geometrically it represents a family of level curves for that potential function [6,11].
In this paper, we shall primarily dwell on first order differential equations by resorting to a combination of partial differential equation and the ratio theorem to establish various integrating factors, of great value which could remarkably be applied in reducing a given differential equation into exactness and hence separable form for its solution to be determined.
A cursory look at differential calculus reveals that there is no one size fit straight jacket approach or in general an algorithm in the determination of integrating factors [16] for nonlinear first-order differential equations. Hither, we shall attempt to construct a variety of non-zero [6] functions from the necessary and sufficient conditions that require a none exact differential equation to convert into an exact form. We shall extensively apply the theory on ratios and more importantly to identify certain exact forms to develop a number of cases involving the use of integrating factor formulas, some of which are obviously going to be in terms of a single variable whiles others may appear as sums and products or quotients involving linear combinations of two variables of the types \( xy, \ x/y, \ y \pm x \), and \( y^{2} \pm x^{2} \).
2. Forms of integrating factors
Let the differential form of a first-order differential equation assumed to be non-exact be given byCase 1
If we seek an integrating factor purely in \( x \), then by pairing the first and last expressions in Equation (4) we getCase 2
For an integrating factor in the dependent variable \( y \) alone, one may similarly take from Equation (4) the relationCase 3
Other combinations are possible by applying the ratio theorem and choosing constant multipliers of 1 for the first two terms. By such multipliers, the Equation (4) is modified into the formCase 4
For an integrating factor of the combination \( xy \), it is necessary to take up the multipliers \( y \) and \( x \) for the first two terms of Equation (4), and again by pairing the results with the last term of the same equation, one is led to the relationCase 5
For an integrating factor involving sums of squares of the form \( x^{2}+ y^{2} \), it is necessary to take up the multipliers \( 2x \) and \( 2y \) for the first two terms of Equation (4), and thus by pairing the results with the last term of the same equation, then it leads to the relationCase 6
It can be seen that the differential equation of an innocently looking form \( ydx-xdy = 0 \) is indeed not exact, yet separable. This equation can be shown to transform into exactness by the use of the following non-trivial [6] integrating factors \[ \dfrac{1}{x^{2}}, \, \dfrac{1}{y^{2}}, \, \dfrac{1}{x^{2}-y^{2}}, \, \dfrac{1}{x^{2}+y^{2}} .\] These choices of integrating factors for the differential pair \( ydx - xdy \) [7,18,19], could be exploited to our advantage in introducing five extra useful integrating formulas defined exponentially. A striking coincidence of such a differential pair is arrived at, by noting that when multipliers \( y \) and \(-x \) are imposed on the first two terms of the Equation (4) and the resulting expression paired with the last term of that same equation, one is led to the relationNow, when \( \tau \) takes on the values \( x^{2}, \ y^{2}, \ xy, \ x^{2}- y^{2}, \ x^{2} + y^{2} \), we obtain five different integrating factors which may be used to convert the non-exact differential Equation (1) into an exact form, where such functions are well-defined as shown below:
- \( \mu \left( \dfrac{x}{y} \right) = e^{\int f(x/y)d(x/y)} \), where \( f \left( \dfrac{x}{y} \right) = y^{2} \left( \dfrac{M_{y}- N_{x}}{yN+ xM} \right) \);
- \( \mu \left( \dfrac{y}{x} \right) = e^{\int f(y/x)d(y/x)} \), where \( f \left( \dfrac{y}{x} \right) = x^{2} \left( \dfrac{M_{y}- N_{x}}{yN+ xM} \right) \);
- \( \mu \left( \ln \dfrac{x}{y} \right) = e^{\int f(\ln (x/y))d(\ln (x/y))} \), where \( f \left(\ln \dfrac{x}{y} \right) = xy \left( \dfrac{M_{y}- N_{x}}{yN+ xM} \right) \);
- \( \mu \left( \arctan \dfrac{x}{y} \right) = e^{\int f(\arctan (x/y))d(\arctan (x/y))} \), where \( f \left( \arctan \dfrac{x}{y} \right) = (x^{2}+ y^{2}) \left( \dfrac{M_{y}- N_{x}}{yN+ xM} \right) \);
- \( \mu \left(\xi \right) = e^{\int f(\xi)d\xi} \), where \( f \left( \xi \right) = (y^{2}- x^{2}) \left( \dfrac{M_{y}- N_{x}}{yN+ xM} \right) \), and \( \xi = \dfrac{1}{2}\ln \dfrac{x+y}{y-x} \).
Case 7
If it is known that the non-exact differential Equation (1) is homogeneous with respect to the coefficients \( M(x, y) \), and \( N(x, y) \) of the same degree, then the integrating factor takes the formProof. For homogeneous functions, we may express \( M \) and \( N \) as
Case 8
If it is known that the coefficients of the non-exact differential Equation (1) are functions of products of \( x \) and \( y \) defined by \( M(x, y) = y f_{ 1}(xy) \), and \( N(x, y) = x f_{ 2}(xy) \), then the integrating factor can readily be shown to be \[ \mu (x,y) = \dfrac{1}{xM - yN} .\]Proof. By substituting the forms of \( M(x, y) \) and \( N(x, y) \) together with the expression \( [y f_{2}(xy) - y f_{ 2}(xy)]dx \), into Equation (1) we get \[ y f_{1} (xy) dx + [yf_{x}(xy)- yf_{2}(xy) ]dx + x f_{2} (xy) dy = 0 .\] Thus \[ y[f_{1}(xy) - f_{2}(xy)]dx + f_{2}(xy)d(xy) = 0 .\] This implies that
Proof. By substituting the new forms of \( M(x, y) \) and \( N(x, y) \) into Equation (1) we get
Case 9
An integrating factor of the form \( \mu (x,y) = x^{p} y^{q} \) may be assumed if the differential equation is given by the general formCase 10
Some differential forms may not have associated integrating factors to them, but if such differential equations are characterized as having Homogeneous coefficients, then it suffices to fall on certain useful appropriate substitutions, that transform the differential equations into other standard equations which may have readily available integration factors [20] to make them solvable. A consideration of the differential equation of the formProof. By the hypothesis that the arbitrary functions \( f_{1}(x, y),\ f_{2}(x, y) \) and \( f_{3}(x, y) \) are homogeneous, let \( y = vx \implies dy = vdx + xdv \) and noting from Equation (11) that when Equation (29) is carefully arranged the last term of that equation yields total differential form given by \( d(y/x) = (xdy - ydx)/x^{ 2} = dv \), so that in effect the differential equation for case 10 reduces to the form \[ [ f_{1}(v)(vdx + xdv)- f_{2}(v)dx]+ f_{3}(v)x^{k+2} dv = 0 .\] Implying that
3. Discussion of results
An erroneous impression usually created in the study of differential equations lies in the result of solving the partial differential equation from which an integrating factor could be extracted as being relatively difficult to handle than the original non-exact equation to which a solution is being sorted. The general rule for solving a differential equation is to identify its type and to map up the method that best solves it. However, many differential equations do not fall under the category of separability, homogeneity, and exactness and so require some integrating factors to reduce them to any of such types that lead to their solutions. In general, there are no known algorithms for finding integrating factors and so it is essential to explore their derivations and not to resign them to only the simple cases involving either the independent or the dependent variable only. An advantage that can be adduced about integrating factors is that it may happen that at least two integrating factors \( \mu_{1}, \mu_{2} \) to the particular non-exact differential equation can be easily found from any of the cases outlined, such that their ratio is not a constant, then it will be superfluous and waste of effort to go through the normal procedure in finding the potential function that solves the differential equation. In such instance, the general solution is best written out as an implicit relation in the form \( \mu_{1} (x,y) = C\mu_{2} (x,y) \). This can be anticipated in the sense that, a partial differential equation may have more than one possible solution to it, and each of the integrating factors \( \mu_{1}, \mu_{2} \) satisfies the established partial differential equations at Equation (2). The constant \( C \) has to do with the associated order of the original differential equation.We adopted the ratio theorem together with specific multipliers to derive some integrating factors and further observed keenly that certain differential forms were equally exploitable in advancing other important integrating factors. Generally integrating factors are not unique, for the single fundamental reason that the partial differential equation from which these integrating factors are developed from do not have unique solutions and so such intrinsic characterization are exhibited by them as well.
It is important to underscore that not, every integrating factor turns out as an exponential function as may be observed for the cases 7, 8 and 9. These cases have been meticulously introduced to give a firm grip on the subject matter. They are developed from the viewpoint of certain peculiarity of their forms and characterization such as the homogeneity of their coefficients and even much more on the instance that some are easily turned into product of exact forms.
Case 9 was more or less developed on a hunch base on the form of the coefficients of the differential pairs with the condition that the determinant of the resulting linear equations should be non-singular. Another fair form of case nine with arbitrary functions whose total derivatives are coincidental to the equation expressed in differential form was also exploited to give a simpler integrating factor for that particular case.
Finally, the case 10 was introduced to show that not every differential equation in differential form may have direct integrating factor related to it. However, with appropriate substitutions, they transform into named differential equation such as the Bernoulli equation which is known to have some integrating factor linked to it when transformed into the standard first-order differential equation.
4. Conclusion
In this paper, an exploration is made into the derivation of integrating factors that are dependent on certain linear combinations involving two variables. Such useful functions are not unique in general, and the particular ordinary differential equation that calls for its use may have an infinite number of them associated with the very same differential equation. Thus, with some dexterity and ingenuity, any of such integrating factors could be applied to turn the defining non-exact differential equation into solvable type without recourse to the usual forms they are adopted either in terms of the single independent variable \( x \) or that of the dependent variable \( y \). We hope that the research on the gallery of integrating factors will spark a renewed interest and also make the subject matter have its rightful place it fully deserves in the study of differential equation.Author Contributions
All authors contributed equally to the writing of this paper. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.Conflicts of Interest
''The authors declare no conflict of interest.''References
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