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2) [[MA366-2|Separable Equations]]<br>
 
2) [[MA366-2|Separable Equations]]<br>
 
3) [[MA366-3|First Order Linear Equations]]<br>
 
3) [[MA366-3|First Order Linear Equations]]<br>
4) [[MA366-4|Homogeneous Equations]]
+
4) [[MA366-4|Homogeneous Equations]]<br>
 +
5) [[MA366-5|Autonomous Equations]]
  
 
This course wiki is under construction; more will be added soon.
 
This course wiki is under construction; more will be added soon.
  
 
[[Meta Course List|Back to the Meta Course List]]
 
[[Meta Course List|Back to the Meta Course List]]

Revision as of 10:10, 6 October 2009

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MA 366: Ordinary Differential Equations

Differential equations, which state a relation between a function and its derivatives, appear constantly in physics, chemistry, engineering, biology, and whatever other sufficiently mathematical science one can think of, and the more difficult ones continue to be an active area of mathematical research. Solving differential equations, as you will see in this course, proves to be an endeavor requiring a variety of techniques, and far more frequently than you would prefer, no simple formula exists for deriving the desired solution.

The differential equations you will study in this course are broken up into different families according to which techniques lead to their solutions. It is (mostly) along these lines that this course wiki is divided.

Contents
1) What does it mean to solve a differential equation? What is an initial value problem?
2) Separable Equations
3) First Order Linear Equations
4) Homogeneous Equations
5) Autonomous Equations

This course wiki is under construction; more will be added soon.

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Alumni Liaison

To all math majors: "Mathematics is a wonderfully rich subject."

Dr. Paul Garrett