In Problems 11 and 12, we consider the effect of modifying the equation for the prey
Consider the system
where
a) Find all of the critical points. How does their location change as
b) Determine the type and stability property of each criticalpoint. Find the value
c) Draw a direction field and phase portrait for a value of
d) Describe the effect on the two populations as
Trending nowThis is a popular solution!
Chapter 7 Solutions
DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS-NEXTGEN WILEYPLUS
Additional Math Textbook Solutions
Introductory Statistics
Basic Business Statistics, Student Value Edition
Elementary Statistics
University Calculus: Early Transcendentals (4th Edition)
Algebra and Trigonometry (6th Edition)
Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World (7th Edition)
- 6. Tank A initially holds 500 liters of pure water and tank B 1000 liters of 90% alcohol mixture (you can think of it as 900 liters of alcohol mixed with 100 liters of water). 10% mixture of alcohol enters the tank A at a rate of 10 L/min and well mixed solution leaves tank B with the same rate. The water/alcohol mixture is transferred from tank A to tank B with the rate 15 L/min and from tank B to tank A with the rate 5 L/min. Write the initial value problem describing alcohol content of each tank. Write it in the matrix form. DO NOT SOLVE. 100/min of Alcohol Sclution 10min Alcohol Solution with 10% of Alcohol concentration Tank A sonë 0 % of Alcotiul 50/min 152/min Tank B 1000 90% of Ainahalarrow_forwardThe same disease is spreading through two populations, say Pi and P2, with the same size. You may assume that the spread of the disease is well described by the SIR model. dSa - BaSaIa dt dla - dt dRa YaIa dt with Sa(0) + I.(0) + R.(0) = N where N denotes the fixed population size. The subscript a identifies the population P or P2. For example, if a = 1, the variables are related to P1. Assume that S1 (0) = S2 (0) and I1(0) = I½(0) and that no interventions such as quarantine or vaccination have been implemented. If the difference in the spread of the disease is due only to the poor over-all health of a population, which population has the best over-all health of the two populations? - Susceptible Population 1 - Susceptible Population 2 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 10 15 20 t P1. P2. Susceptiblearrow_forwardThis is a single question with 5 problemsarrow_forward
- There are 100,000 students, staff, and faculty with an account at ASU, and when the virus was discovered, there were already 1000 accounts infected and 2000 accounts recovered from the virus. We can formulate the problem as a standard SIR model. The model has a time step size of one hour. From the data of the first hours of the virus spreading through the system we know that α is 0.00001 and that it takes half a day for a computer to be recovered (the average time it takes for people to upload and execute a virus destruction program). (Please use google sheets) a: What is the value of R0? b: How many accounts need to be vaccinated to avoid an epidemic (users need to install a patch on their computer)?arrow_forwardIf L(x)=mx+b is the linearization of the cube root of 3x+1 at x=333 , then b=arrow_forwardplease help me to do the first question,thank you!arrow_forward
- Question 10. Solve it step by step please.arrow_forwardConsider the problem of predicting the population of two species, one of which is a predator, whose population at time t is x₂(t), feeding on the other, which is the prey, whose population is x₁ (t). The two species competing for the same food supply. It is often assumed that, although the birthrate of each of species is simply proportional to the number of species alive at that time, the death rate of each species depends on the population of both species. We will assume that the population of a particular pair of species is described by the equations. dx, (t) dt dx₂ (t) dt = = x₁(t)[4 — 0.0003x₁ (t) — 0.0004x₂(t)] = x₂(t) |2 -0.0002x₁ (t) 0.0001x₂ (t)]. If it is known that the initial population of each species is 10,000. (a) Use Runge-Kutta Midpoint method (by hand) to approximate the solutions at t 0.4 with h = 0.2. (b) Is there a stable solution to this population model? If so, for what values of x₁ and x₂ is the solution stable?arrow_forwardGraph the following Discrete Dynamical Systems. Explain their long-term behavior. Try to find realistic scenarios that these DDS might explain. 7. a(n + 1) = -1.3 a(n) + 20, a(0) = 9arrow_forward
- Only a, b, c please!! Thank you!!!arrow_forwardProblem 20. For the four points b= 0, 8, 8, 20 and t = 0, 1,3,4, we want to find the closest parabola b=C+ Dt +Et². Write the equations Ax=b in the three unknowns x = (C,D,E). Set up the three normal equations AT A = AT b. You do not need to solve the system.arrow_forwardProblem 2. Let dX/dt = AX. Find et and use it to write down the solution to the system. (²2) b) 4-(32) 1 a) A = Aarrow_forward
- Linear Algebra: A Modern IntroductionAlgebraISBN:9781285463247Author:David PoolePublisher:Cengage Learning