Equivalence of oscillation of a class of neutral differential equations and ordinary differential equations (Q1363054): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 17:05, 27 May 2024

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Equivalence of oscillation of a class of neutral differential equations and ordinary differential equations
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    Equivalence of oscillation of a class of neutral differential equations and ordinary differential equations (English)
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    23 February 1998
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    It is shown that a necessary and sufficient condition for equation \[ d/dt\left(x(t)-x(t-r )\right)^{(n)}+p(t)x(t-\sigma )=0,\tag{1} \] to oscillate is that the ordinary differential equation \[ x^{(n+1)}(t)+p(t)x(t)/r=0 \] is oscillatory. Here \(r>0\), \(\sigma \in \mathbb{R}\) are constants, \(n\geq 0\) is an odd integer and \(p:[0,\infty )\to [0,\infty )\) is a continuous function. Some comparison theorems are established. It is shown that the deviation \(\sigma\) has no affection on the oscillation of the equation (1).
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    oscillation
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    positive solutions
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    neutral differential equations
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