Find the general solution of the following differential equation. Primes denote derivatives with respect to x. (x+8y)y' = 4x-y The general solution is (Type an implicit general solution in the form F(x,y) = C, where C is an arbitrary constant. Type an expression using x and y as the variables.)
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Answer:

[tex]xy-2x^2+4y^2=C[/tex]

Step-by-step explanation:

Solve the given differential equation.

[tex](x+8y)\frac{dy}{dx} = 4x-y[/tex]

(1) - Rearrange the differential equation

[tex](x+8y)\frac{dy}{dx} = 4x-y\\\\\Longrightarrow (x+8y)dy=(4x-y)dx\\\\\Longrightarrow -(4x-y)dx+ (x+8y)dy\\\\\Longrightarrow \boxed{ (-4x+y)dx+ (x+8y)dy}[/tex]

(2) - Check to see if this is an exact differential equation

[tex]M=-4x+y \ and \ N=x+8y \ \text{the DE is exact if} \ M_y=N_x\\\\\left\begin{array}{ccc}M_y=1\\N_x=1\end{array}\right\} \ M_y=N_x \therefore \ Exact[/tex]

(3) - Integrate M with respect to x and N with respect to y

[tex]\int(-4x+y)dx\\\\\Longrightarrow \boxed{ -2x^2+xy}\\\\\int(x+8y)dy\\\\\Longrightarrow \boxed{xy+4y^2}[/tex]

(4) Form the solution. The solution will be the two evaluated integrals from above added together ignoring any duplicate terms

[tex]\therefore \boxed{\boxed{xy-2x^2+4y^2=C}}[/tex]