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For a system of differential equations:

$ x'=x^2-1,\\ y'=-y $

(1)Draw the solution curve that starts at the intial point $Y(0)=(x(0),y(0))$.

(2)For the above solution curve $Y(t)=(x(t), y(t))$, draw the $(t, y(t))$ graph.

I know the answer of the first one, it's a straight line from origin the the point $(-1,0)$, but I am not sure what's the second question is about.

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    I don't see the p$i$cutre2012-12-21

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The picture is hard for me to see well, but based on what you say: if the solution $(x(t),y(t))$ looks like a horizontal line, what does that tell you about $(t,y(t))$?

You could also get the answer from observing that the system is decoupled and $y'=-y$. Once you've deduced what $y(0)=y_0$ is, the graph of $y(t)$ is determined.

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    $y$ is a function of $t$, not $x$. $x$ is a (separate) dependent variable in this system. Rather $y'=−y\implies y(t)=Ce^{−t}$. Then $y(0)=0\implies C=0$ so $y(t)=0$.2012-12-16