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Differential equation : Differential equationsDifferential equations describe the relationship between unknown functions and their derivatives. The order of a differential equation describes the most times any function in it has been differentiated. (See differential calculus and integral calculus.)Given that <math>y</math> is a function of <math>x</math> and that <math>y', y, ..., y^{(n)}</math> denote the derivatives <math>dy/dx, d^{2}y/dx^2, ..., d^{n}y/dx^{n}</math>, an ordinary differential equation is an equation involving <math>x, y, y', y, ...</math>. The order of a differential equation is the order <math>n</math> of the highest derivative that appears. An important special case is when the equations do not involve <math>x</math>. These kind of differential equations have the property that the space can be divided into equivalence classes based on whether two points lie on the same solution. These differential equations are vector fields. Since the laws of physics are not believed to change with time, the world is governed by such differential equations. See also Symplectic topology. The problem of solving a differential equation is to find the function <math>y</math> whose derivatives satisfy the equation. For example, the differential equation <math>y + y = 0</math> has the general solution <math>y = A \cos{x} + B \sin{x}</math>, where <math>A</math>, <math>B</math> are constants determined from boundary conditions. In the case where the equations are linear, this can be done by breaking the original equation down into smaller equations, solving those, and then adding the results back together. Unfortunately, many of the interesting differential equations are non-linear, which means that they cannot be broken down in this way. There are also a number of techniques for solving differential equations using a computer including the finite element method and relaxation techniques[?]. Ordinary differential equations are to be distinguished from partial differential equations where <math>y</math> is a function of several variables, and the differential equation involves partial derivatives. Differential equations are used to construct mathematical models of physical phenomena such as fluid dynamics or celestial mechanics. Therefore, the study of differential equations is a wide field in both pure and applied mathematics. Differential equations have intrinsically interesting properties such as whether or not solutions exist, and should solutions exist, whether those solutions are unique. Applied mathematicians, physicists and engineers are usually more interested in how to compute solutions to differential equations. These solutions are then used to design bridges, automobiles, aircraft, sewers, etc. See also: Examples of differential equations than when I am/am.html">am trying to be an impossible saint."
That was the mistake he made; he always ran to extremes. He thought
Nature, instead of serving only as a challenge to it. Accordingly,
followed by a greater swing of the pendulum in the opposite
hotly. Then, one evening, without any previous warning, I had a
wedding eve."
I went. He was once more "tidying up." All his drawers were open,
written paper, all, as before, in course of demolition.
I smiled: I could not help it, and, no way abashed, he laughed his
others."
Then, laying his hand on my shoulder, and speaking with the sudden
has heard my prayer, old friend. He knows I am weak. He has sent
seemed to me the face of a hard, narrow woman, but, of course, he
an old restaurant bill, and, stooping, he picked it up and held it
candles seems to cling to these things?" he said lightly, sniffing
done--the irreparable, ever-widening ruin I have perhaps brought
every.html">Every hour, every minute of it shall be devoted to your service."
As he stood there, with his eager boyish eyes upraised, a light
photograph back to him, and it lay upon the table before him. He
though her piety, as is the case with most people, was of the
her sympathy with things good. For a longer time than I had
at last there came the inevitable relapse.
I called upon him, in answer to an excited message, and found him in
combined with lamentable lack of the most ordinary precautions
exuberant denunciations of himself, and I undertook the delicate
His joy, when I told him, was boundless.
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