Evaluate $dotv=-fracgammamv+g$ Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)How to solve this ODE: $dfracdotysqrt1+doty^2=c$?solution of a ODE with a function of $dotx$Analytic approximation of $ddot x+gamma sign(dot x)+x=0$Second Order Inhomogenous Differential EquationEvaluate function for observed $x, dotx$.Solving $rmdot v = frac q m v times B + frac q m E$Solving system of two inhomogenous ODEsSolve for $theta$ in $sum M_y = - I dotTheta(dotpsi cos(theta)+p) $Solution of differential equation with two variableSolution of a differential equations
The Nth Gryphon Number
How can I prevent/balance waiting and turtling as a response to cooldown mechanics
Calculation of line of sight system gain
How can I list files in reverse time order by a command and pass them as arguments to another command?
How does TikZ render an arc?
"Destructive power" carried by a B-52?
Plotting a Maclaurin series
How does the body cool itself in a stillsuit?
Twin's vs. Twins'
Baking rewards as operations
.bashrc alias for a command with fixed second parameter
Noise in Eigenvalues plot
Fit odd number of triplets in a measure?
Getting representations of the Lie group out of representations of its Lie algebra
How do you write "wild blueberries flavored"?
What was the last profitable war?
Is this Half-dragon Quaggoth boss monster balanced?
Why complex landing gears are used instead of simple, reliable and light weight muscle wire or shape memory alloys?
Was the pager message from Nick Fury to Captain Marvel unnecessary?
Centre cell vertically in tabularx
Did John Wesley plagiarize Matthew Henry...?
Is the Mordenkainen's Sword spell underpowered?
How to achieve cat-like agility?
Why is there so little support for joining EFTA in the British parliament?
Evaluate $dotv=-fracgammamv+g$
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)How to solve this ODE: $dfracdotysqrt1+doty^2=c$?solution of a ODE with a function of $dotx$Analytic approximation of $ddot x+gamma sign(dot x)+x=0$Second Order Inhomogenous Differential EquationEvaluate function for observed $x, dotx$.Solving $rmdot v = frac q m v times B + frac q m E$Solving system of two inhomogenous ODEsSolve for $theta$ in $sum M_y = - I dotTheta(dotpsi cos(theta)+p) $Solution of differential equation with two variableSolution of a differential equations
$begingroup$
Solve: $$dotv=-fracgammamv+g$$
Where $gamma,m,g$ are constants
I have to to separate the equation as $dotv=fracdvdt$
and got to:
$$fracdv-gv=-fracgammamdt$$
ordinary-differential-equations physics
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Solve: $$dotv=-fracgammamv+g$$
Where $gamma,m,g$ are constants
I have to to separate the equation as $dotv=fracdvdt$
and got to:
$$fracdv-gv=-fracgammamdt$$
ordinary-differential-equations physics
$endgroup$
3
$begingroup$
What about dividing by r.h.s? $$ fractext d vg - fracgammam v = text d t $$
$endgroup$
– Harry49
Apr 2 at 15:50
$begingroup$
@Harry49 so we get $fracln(g-fracgammamv)-fracgammam=dt$? integrating both sides and taking exponent gives $v=fracmgamma(g-e^t)$?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 2 at 15:54
1
$begingroup$
@newhere close, but don't forget to do the reverse chain rule when you integrate. You're missing some constants in from of the $ln$. Also don't forget you get a constant of integration somewhere
$endgroup$
– John Doe
Apr 2 at 15:56
$begingroup$
I think it's easier to use the method of integrating factor. Or $v=v_h+v_p$.
$endgroup$
– Hans Lundmark
Apr 2 at 16:20
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Solve: $$dotv=-fracgammamv+g$$
Where $gamma,m,g$ are constants
I have to to separate the equation as $dotv=fracdvdt$
and got to:
$$fracdv-gv=-fracgammamdt$$
ordinary-differential-equations physics
$endgroup$
Solve: $$dotv=-fracgammamv+g$$
Where $gamma,m,g$ are constants
I have to to separate the equation as $dotv=fracdvdt$
and got to:
$$fracdv-gv=-fracgammamdt$$
ordinary-differential-equations physics
ordinary-differential-equations physics
asked Apr 2 at 15:45
newherenewhere
885411
885411
3
$begingroup$
What about dividing by r.h.s? $$ fractext d vg - fracgammam v = text d t $$
$endgroup$
– Harry49
Apr 2 at 15:50
$begingroup$
@Harry49 so we get $fracln(g-fracgammamv)-fracgammam=dt$? integrating both sides and taking exponent gives $v=fracmgamma(g-e^t)$?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 2 at 15:54
1
$begingroup$
@newhere close, but don't forget to do the reverse chain rule when you integrate. You're missing some constants in from of the $ln$. Also don't forget you get a constant of integration somewhere
$endgroup$
– John Doe
Apr 2 at 15:56
$begingroup$
I think it's easier to use the method of integrating factor. Or $v=v_h+v_p$.
$endgroup$
– Hans Lundmark
Apr 2 at 16:20
add a comment |
3
$begingroup$
What about dividing by r.h.s? $$ fractext d vg - fracgammam v = text d t $$
$endgroup$
– Harry49
Apr 2 at 15:50
$begingroup$
@Harry49 so we get $fracln(g-fracgammamv)-fracgammam=dt$? integrating both sides and taking exponent gives $v=fracmgamma(g-e^t)$?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 2 at 15:54
1
$begingroup$
@newhere close, but don't forget to do the reverse chain rule when you integrate. You're missing some constants in from of the $ln$. Also don't forget you get a constant of integration somewhere
$endgroup$
– John Doe
Apr 2 at 15:56
$begingroup$
I think it's easier to use the method of integrating factor. Or $v=v_h+v_p$.
$endgroup$
– Hans Lundmark
Apr 2 at 16:20
3
3
$begingroup$
What about dividing by r.h.s? $$ fractext d vg - fracgammam v = text d t $$
$endgroup$
– Harry49
Apr 2 at 15:50
$begingroup$
What about dividing by r.h.s? $$ fractext d vg - fracgammam v = text d t $$
$endgroup$
– Harry49
Apr 2 at 15:50
$begingroup$
@Harry49 so we get $fracln(g-fracgammamv)-fracgammam=dt$? integrating both sides and taking exponent gives $v=fracmgamma(g-e^t)$?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 2 at 15:54
$begingroup$
@Harry49 so we get $fracln(g-fracgammamv)-fracgammam=dt$? integrating both sides and taking exponent gives $v=fracmgamma(g-e^t)$?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 2 at 15:54
1
1
$begingroup$
@newhere close, but don't forget to do the reverse chain rule when you integrate. You're missing some constants in from of the $ln$. Also don't forget you get a constant of integration somewhere
$endgroup$
– John Doe
Apr 2 at 15:56
$begingroup$
@newhere close, but don't forget to do the reverse chain rule when you integrate. You're missing some constants in from of the $ln$. Also don't forget you get a constant of integration somewhere
$endgroup$
– John Doe
Apr 2 at 15:56
$begingroup$
I think it's easier to use the method of integrating factor. Or $v=v_h+v_p$.
$endgroup$
– Hans Lundmark
Apr 2 at 16:20
$begingroup$
I think it's easier to use the method of integrating factor. Or $v=v_h+v_p$.
$endgroup$
– Hans Lundmark
Apr 2 at 16:20
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Your rearrangement is incorrect; what you can condlude is that $fracdv/dt-gv=-fracgammam$, but note that cross-multiplying by $dt$ changes $g$ to $gdt$. Harry49 has already explained how to solve the problem by separation, so I'll mention another method, that of integration factors.
Our original equation is $dotv+Pv=Q$ with $P:=fracgammam,,Q:=g$, neither of which depend on $v$. The procedure I'm about to describe does require this, but it allows for a $t$-dependence.
Write $R:=expint Pdt$ so $R^prime=RP,,(Rv)^prime=RQ,,v=R^-1int RQdt$. With indefinite integration $P$ ($R$) is determined up to an additive (multiplicative) constant, while $v$ is determined up to $CR$ with $C$ an integration constant, regardless of which antiderivative of $P$ is chosen in defining $R$.
In the case at hand $v=e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/m dt=Ce^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$. If $v_0$ denotes the $t=0$ value of $v$, $v=(v_0-fracmggamma)e^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$.
Edit: as for separation, we get $t-t_0=-fracmgammaln |g-fracgamma vm|implies v=gmpfracmgammaexpfracgamma (t-t_0)m$, which can be manipulated in the same way.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Taking $R=e^fracgammamt$ I got $v=fracmggamma$ is it correct?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 13:43
$begingroup$
@newhere Your result is just a constant. You should get $e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/mdt$, but bear in mind the integral includes an integration constant.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 13:50
$begingroup$
$dotv+fracgammamv=g$ taking integration factor $R=e^int fracgammamdt=e^fracgammamt$ so $e^ fracgammamtdotv+e^fracgammamtfracgammamv=e^ fracgammamtg$ setting $k=fracgammam$ we have $e^ktdotv+e^ktkv=e^ ktg$ integrating both sides we get $e^ktv=frace^ ktkg+c$
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:10
1
$begingroup$
@newhere With $R=expfracgamma tm$ we have $int RQ dt=fracmggammaexpfracgamma tm+C$ so $v=fracmggamma+Cexpfrac-gamma tm$.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 14:12
1
$begingroup$
Just found where I lost the constant, thanks!!!
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:13
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "69"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3172019%2fevaluate-dotv-frac-gammamvg%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Your rearrangement is incorrect; what you can condlude is that $fracdv/dt-gv=-fracgammam$, but note that cross-multiplying by $dt$ changes $g$ to $gdt$. Harry49 has already explained how to solve the problem by separation, so I'll mention another method, that of integration factors.
Our original equation is $dotv+Pv=Q$ with $P:=fracgammam,,Q:=g$, neither of which depend on $v$. The procedure I'm about to describe does require this, but it allows for a $t$-dependence.
Write $R:=expint Pdt$ so $R^prime=RP,,(Rv)^prime=RQ,,v=R^-1int RQdt$. With indefinite integration $P$ ($R$) is determined up to an additive (multiplicative) constant, while $v$ is determined up to $CR$ with $C$ an integration constant, regardless of which antiderivative of $P$ is chosen in defining $R$.
In the case at hand $v=e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/m dt=Ce^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$. If $v_0$ denotes the $t=0$ value of $v$, $v=(v_0-fracmggamma)e^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$.
Edit: as for separation, we get $t-t_0=-fracmgammaln |g-fracgamma vm|implies v=gmpfracmgammaexpfracgamma (t-t_0)m$, which can be manipulated in the same way.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Taking $R=e^fracgammamt$ I got $v=fracmggamma$ is it correct?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 13:43
$begingroup$
@newhere Your result is just a constant. You should get $e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/mdt$, but bear in mind the integral includes an integration constant.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 13:50
$begingroup$
$dotv+fracgammamv=g$ taking integration factor $R=e^int fracgammamdt=e^fracgammamt$ so $e^ fracgammamtdotv+e^fracgammamtfracgammamv=e^ fracgammamtg$ setting $k=fracgammam$ we have $e^ktdotv+e^ktkv=e^ ktg$ integrating both sides we get $e^ktv=frace^ ktkg+c$
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:10
1
$begingroup$
@newhere With $R=expfracgamma tm$ we have $int RQ dt=fracmggammaexpfracgamma tm+C$ so $v=fracmggamma+Cexpfrac-gamma tm$.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 14:12
1
$begingroup$
Just found where I lost the constant, thanks!!!
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Your rearrangement is incorrect; what you can condlude is that $fracdv/dt-gv=-fracgammam$, but note that cross-multiplying by $dt$ changes $g$ to $gdt$. Harry49 has already explained how to solve the problem by separation, so I'll mention another method, that of integration factors.
Our original equation is $dotv+Pv=Q$ with $P:=fracgammam,,Q:=g$, neither of which depend on $v$. The procedure I'm about to describe does require this, but it allows for a $t$-dependence.
Write $R:=expint Pdt$ so $R^prime=RP,,(Rv)^prime=RQ,,v=R^-1int RQdt$. With indefinite integration $P$ ($R$) is determined up to an additive (multiplicative) constant, while $v$ is determined up to $CR$ with $C$ an integration constant, regardless of which antiderivative of $P$ is chosen in defining $R$.
In the case at hand $v=e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/m dt=Ce^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$. If $v_0$ denotes the $t=0$ value of $v$, $v=(v_0-fracmggamma)e^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$.
Edit: as for separation, we get $t-t_0=-fracmgammaln |g-fracgamma vm|implies v=gmpfracmgammaexpfracgamma (t-t_0)m$, which can be manipulated in the same way.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Taking $R=e^fracgammamt$ I got $v=fracmggamma$ is it correct?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 13:43
$begingroup$
@newhere Your result is just a constant. You should get $e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/mdt$, but bear in mind the integral includes an integration constant.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 13:50
$begingroup$
$dotv+fracgammamv=g$ taking integration factor $R=e^int fracgammamdt=e^fracgammamt$ so $e^ fracgammamtdotv+e^fracgammamtfracgammamv=e^ fracgammamtg$ setting $k=fracgammam$ we have $e^ktdotv+e^ktkv=e^ ktg$ integrating both sides we get $e^ktv=frace^ ktkg+c$
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:10
1
$begingroup$
@newhere With $R=expfracgamma tm$ we have $int RQ dt=fracmggammaexpfracgamma tm+C$ so $v=fracmggamma+Cexpfrac-gamma tm$.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 14:12
1
$begingroup$
Just found where I lost the constant, thanks!!!
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Your rearrangement is incorrect; what you can condlude is that $fracdv/dt-gv=-fracgammam$, but note that cross-multiplying by $dt$ changes $g$ to $gdt$. Harry49 has already explained how to solve the problem by separation, so I'll mention another method, that of integration factors.
Our original equation is $dotv+Pv=Q$ with $P:=fracgammam,,Q:=g$, neither of which depend on $v$. The procedure I'm about to describe does require this, but it allows for a $t$-dependence.
Write $R:=expint Pdt$ so $R^prime=RP,,(Rv)^prime=RQ,,v=R^-1int RQdt$. With indefinite integration $P$ ($R$) is determined up to an additive (multiplicative) constant, while $v$ is determined up to $CR$ with $C$ an integration constant, regardless of which antiderivative of $P$ is chosen in defining $R$.
In the case at hand $v=e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/m dt=Ce^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$. If $v_0$ denotes the $t=0$ value of $v$, $v=(v_0-fracmggamma)e^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$.
Edit: as for separation, we get $t-t_0=-fracmgammaln |g-fracgamma vm|implies v=gmpfracmgammaexpfracgamma (t-t_0)m$, which can be manipulated in the same way.
$endgroup$
Your rearrangement is incorrect; what you can condlude is that $fracdv/dt-gv=-fracgammam$, but note that cross-multiplying by $dt$ changes $g$ to $gdt$. Harry49 has already explained how to solve the problem by separation, so I'll mention another method, that of integration factors.
Our original equation is $dotv+Pv=Q$ with $P:=fracgammam,,Q:=g$, neither of which depend on $v$. The procedure I'm about to describe does require this, but it allows for a $t$-dependence.
Write $R:=expint Pdt$ so $R^prime=RP,,(Rv)^prime=RQ,,v=R^-1int RQdt$. With indefinite integration $P$ ($R$) is determined up to an additive (multiplicative) constant, while $v$ is determined up to $CR$ with $C$ an integration constant, regardless of which antiderivative of $P$ is chosen in defining $R$.
In the case at hand $v=e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/m dt=Ce^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$. If $v_0$ denotes the $t=0$ value of $v$, $v=(v_0-fracmggamma)e^-gamma t/m+fracmggamma$.
Edit: as for separation, we get $t-t_0=-fracmgammaln |g-fracgamma vm|implies v=gmpfracmgammaexpfracgamma (t-t_0)m$, which can be manipulated in the same way.
edited Apr 3 at 13:51
answered Apr 2 at 16:03
J.G.J.G.
34.1k23252
34.1k23252
$begingroup$
Taking $R=e^fracgammamt$ I got $v=fracmggamma$ is it correct?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 13:43
$begingroup$
@newhere Your result is just a constant. You should get $e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/mdt$, but bear in mind the integral includes an integration constant.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 13:50
$begingroup$
$dotv+fracgammamv=g$ taking integration factor $R=e^int fracgammamdt=e^fracgammamt$ so $e^ fracgammamtdotv+e^fracgammamtfracgammamv=e^ fracgammamtg$ setting $k=fracgammam$ we have $e^ktdotv+e^ktkv=e^ ktg$ integrating both sides we get $e^ktv=frace^ ktkg+c$
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:10
1
$begingroup$
@newhere With $R=expfracgamma tm$ we have $int RQ dt=fracmggammaexpfracgamma tm+C$ so $v=fracmggamma+Cexpfrac-gamma tm$.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 14:12
1
$begingroup$
Just found where I lost the constant, thanks!!!
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Taking $R=e^fracgammamt$ I got $v=fracmggamma$ is it correct?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 13:43
$begingroup$
@newhere Your result is just a constant. You should get $e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/mdt$, but bear in mind the integral includes an integration constant.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 13:50
$begingroup$
$dotv+fracgammamv=g$ taking integration factor $R=e^int fracgammamdt=e^fracgammamt$ so $e^ fracgammamtdotv+e^fracgammamtfracgammamv=e^ fracgammamtg$ setting $k=fracgammam$ we have $e^ktdotv+e^ktkv=e^ ktg$ integrating both sides we get $e^ktv=frace^ ktkg+c$
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:10
1
$begingroup$
@newhere With $R=expfracgamma tm$ we have $int RQ dt=fracmggammaexpfracgamma tm+C$ so $v=fracmggamma+Cexpfrac-gamma tm$.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 14:12
1
$begingroup$
Just found where I lost the constant, thanks!!!
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:13
$begingroup$
Taking $R=e^fracgammamt$ I got $v=fracmggamma$ is it correct?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 13:43
$begingroup$
Taking $R=e^fracgammamt$ I got $v=fracmggamma$ is it correct?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 13:43
$begingroup$
@newhere Your result is just a constant. You should get $e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/mdt$, but bear in mind the integral includes an integration constant.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 13:50
$begingroup$
@newhere Your result is just a constant. You should get $e^-gamma t/mint ge^gamma t/mdt$, but bear in mind the integral includes an integration constant.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 13:50
$begingroup$
$dotv+fracgammamv=g$ taking integration factor $R=e^int fracgammamdt=e^fracgammamt$ so $e^ fracgammamtdotv+e^fracgammamtfracgammamv=e^ fracgammamtg$ setting $k=fracgammam$ we have $e^ktdotv+e^ktkv=e^ ktg$ integrating both sides we get $e^ktv=frace^ ktkg+c$
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:10
$begingroup$
$dotv+fracgammamv=g$ taking integration factor $R=e^int fracgammamdt=e^fracgammamt$ so $e^ fracgammamtdotv+e^fracgammamtfracgammamv=e^ fracgammamtg$ setting $k=fracgammam$ we have $e^ktdotv+e^ktkv=e^ ktg$ integrating both sides we get $e^ktv=frace^ ktkg+c$
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:10
1
1
$begingroup$
@newhere With $R=expfracgamma tm$ we have $int RQ dt=fracmggammaexpfracgamma tm+C$ so $v=fracmggamma+Cexpfrac-gamma tm$.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 14:12
$begingroup$
@newhere With $R=expfracgamma tm$ we have $int RQ dt=fracmggammaexpfracgamma tm+C$ so $v=fracmggamma+Cexpfrac-gamma tm$.
$endgroup$
– J.G.
Apr 3 at 14:12
1
1
$begingroup$
Just found where I lost the constant, thanks!!!
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:13
$begingroup$
Just found where I lost the constant, thanks!!!
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 3 at 14:13
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Mathematics Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3172019%2fevaluate-dotv-frac-gammamvg%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
3
$begingroup$
What about dividing by r.h.s? $$ fractext d vg - fracgammam v = text d t $$
$endgroup$
– Harry49
Apr 2 at 15:50
$begingroup$
@Harry49 so we get $fracln(g-fracgammamv)-fracgammam=dt$? integrating both sides and taking exponent gives $v=fracmgamma(g-e^t)$?
$endgroup$
– newhere
Apr 2 at 15:54
1
$begingroup$
@newhere close, but don't forget to do the reverse chain rule when you integrate. You're missing some constants in from of the $ln$. Also don't forget you get a constant of integration somewhere
$endgroup$
– John Doe
Apr 2 at 15:56
$begingroup$
I think it's easier to use the method of integrating factor. Or $v=v_h+v_p$.
$endgroup$
– Hans Lundmark
Apr 2 at 16:20