Find two-parameter families of solutions for the following differential equation $ yy'' + (y')^2 = 1. $
Can this be explained on the appropriote steps required to find the solution of $y = \pm \sqrt{x^2+Fx+G}$, where $F$ and $G$ are constants.
Find two-parameter families of solutions for the following differential equation $ yy'' + (y')^2 = 1. $
Can this be explained on the appropriote steps required to find the solution of $y = \pm \sqrt{x^2+Fx+G}$, where $F$ and $G$ are constants.
The key observation is the fact that $\dfrac{d}{dx}\left( y \dfrac{dy}{dx}\right) = y \dfrac{d^2 y}{dx^2} + \left( \dfrac{dy}{dx}\right)^2$ Hence, we have that $\dfrac{d}{dx}\left( y \dfrac{dy}{dx}\right) = 1$ i.e. $y \dfrac{dy}{dx} = x + c_1 \implies y^2 = x^2 + 2c_1x + c_2 \implies y = \pm \sqrt{x^2 + Fx + G}$