Differential Equations in Context: Modeling and Slope Fields (AP Calc AB Unit 7)

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25 Terms

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Differential equation

An equation that relates an unknown function to one or more of its derivatives.

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First-order differential equation

A differential equation in which the highest derivative that appears is the first derivative.

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Rate of change (in modeling)

A description of how a quantity changes, typically written as a derivative such as dQ/dt or dy/dx.

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Local behavior

The idea that a differential equation tells you the instantaneous slope at each point, not an explicit formula for the function all at once.

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Independent variable

The input variable (often t for time or x for position) with respect to which the derivative is taken.

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Initial condition

A starting value (e.g., y(0)=y0) used to pick out a specific solution from a family of solutions.

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Initial value problem (IVP)

A differential equation together with an initial condition that specifies a unique solution (in typical AP settings).

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Proportionality model

A model based on “proportional to” language, often leading to a differential equation like dy/dt = k·(expression).

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Constant of proportionality (k)

The constant multiplier in a proportionality differential equation (e.g., dy/dt = ky) that controls growth/decay rate and direction.

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Exponential growth/decay model

The model dy/dt = ky; k>0 gives growth and k<0 gives decay.

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Limiting value (L) model

A model where the rate is proportional to the difference from a limiting value: dy/dt = k(L − y), often producing approach to equilibrium.

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Equilibrium (in differential equations)

A value of y where the derivative is zero, so solutions can stay constant there.

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Accumulation (“in minus out”) model

A structure for changing quantities: dQ/dt = (rate in) − (rate out).

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Consistent units (in modeling)

The requirement that each term in a rate equation must have units of “amount of Q per unit time.”

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Concentration

Amount per volume (e.g., kg/L); used to convert between “amount” and “rate” in mixing problems.

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Flow rate

Volume per time (e.g., L/min); used with concentration to compute mass/amount rates in or out.

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Mass (amount) rate

The rate of change of an amount (e.g., kg/min), often computed as (concentration)×(flow rate).

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Autonomous differential equation

A differential equation that does not explicitly involve the independent variable (e.g., dy/dt = g(y)), so slopes depend only on y.

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Slope field (direction field)

A graph showing short line segments whose slopes equal dy/dx = f(x,y) at many points, indicating how solution curves behave.

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Solution curve

A smooth curve whose tangent slope at each point matches the slope field (i.e., matches the differential equation).

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Stable equilibrium

An equilibrium where nearby solutions move toward the equilibrium over time.

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Unstable equilibrium

An equilibrium where nearby solutions move away from the equilibrium over time.

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Verifying a solution

Checking that a proposed function makes the differential equation true after substitution, and also satisfies any initial condition.

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Satisfies a differential equation (on an interval)

After differentiating and substituting y=g(x), the equality g′(x)=f(x,g(x)) holds for all x in the interval (where defined).

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Uniqueness / “no crossing” behavior

For well-behaved differential equations (typical in AP), two different solutions cannot pass through the same point, so solution curves should not intersect in a slope field.

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