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I've been given a second order differential equation $$x^2y'' + xy' + (x^2 - v^2)v = 0$$(where $v$ is a parameter)* and asked to identify the dependent and independent variables. Question is How do i know which are dependent and independent? I'am only used to equations of the form $x^2\frac{d^2y}{dx^2} + \frac{dy}{dx} = 0$ where i can easily tell that $y = f(x)$.

*I don't know what that means!

Thanks In Advance.

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    Is $y$ a function of $x$ or of $\nu$? There's no way to tell this directly from your equation.2012-01-06
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    @patrick It's implied, but strongly implied that it's $y(x)$ I'd think.2012-01-06
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    Are you completely sure this is transcribed correctly? This is *almost* Bessel's function except the last $v$ would be a $y$.2012-01-06
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    @patrick, ok, I see that the OP edited to clarify.2012-01-06
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    @Mark Beadles : I understood that $y$ was a function of $x$ (just because most of the time it is) but I just wanted OP to be clear with himself since he's asking himself precisely those kind of questions.2012-01-06
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    @PatrickDaSilva, very good point.2012-01-06

2 Answers 2

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Usually when you see the $y'$ derivative notation in this context it just means the derivate of $y$ wrt $x$, i.e. $\frac{dy}{dx}$. So $$x^2y\prime\prime + xy\prime + (x^2 - v^2)v \equiv x^2\frac{d^2y}{dx^2} + x\frac{dy}{dx} + (x^2 - v^2)v$$ and $y(x)$ would be the dependent variable.

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    I get it.So you get it too:) (i mean an up-vote!)2012-01-06
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Here, $y$ is a dependent variable of the independent variable $x$. Now Mark Beadles already answered that part, the part I'm going to answer is the "*I don't know what that means" part. The notion of parameter here means that for each value of $\nu$, we are given the differential equation. Solving this equation for $y$ as a function of $x$ and $\nu$ does not mean that $y$ is a function of $\nu$, but rather that given $\nu$, $y(x)$ solve the differential equation with $\nu$ fixed. For instance, the well-known equation $$ \frac{dy}{dx} = \lambda x, $$ where $\lambda$ is a parameter, has the solution $y(x) = Ce^{\lambda x}$, with $C$ a real constant. The fact that $\lambda$ is in the expression of $y$ does not mean that $y$ is a function of $\lambda$ ; when you consider the differential equation, you fix $\lambda$ beforehand, and then you solve the differential equation to find $y(x)$. In other words, you're not solving for $y(x,\lambda)$, but you're finding $y(x)$ for a family of differential equations parametrized by the parameter $\lambda$.

Hope that helps,

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    Yup.This makes sense.2012-01-06