Section 9.7 - Solving Non-Homogeneous Linear Systems
A non-homogeneous linear system has the form , where .
The general solution to this equation is given by
where
is the general solution to the corresponding homogeneous equation and
is a particular solution to
This is known, again, as the Superposition Principle.
Let A be an n×n matrix and let x1(t),x2(t),…,xn(t) be n linearly independent solutions to the homogeneous system x′=Ax. Then the fundamental matrix for the system x′=Ax is given by
The general solution of can be expressed as
Variations of Parameters
Look for a particular solution of the form
Steps:
Write down , form the fundamental matrix , and find its inverse
Find
Find by integrating
Compute
Obtain the general solution
Undetermined Coefficients
Applicable to non-homogeneous linear system where
is a matrix with constant entries
All entries of are polynomials, exponentials, sines and cosines, or sums and products of the three
Steps:
Write down and form the fundamental matrix
Make an initial guess for based on the form of the RHS
Solve for the coefficients in our guess for
Obtain the general solution
Issues w/ Undetermined Coefficient Method
When consists of more than one type of exponential