The differential equation x=fox

From MaRDI portal
Publication:1240356

DOI10.1016/0022-0396(79)90143-8zbMath0363.34001OpenAlexW1997463214MaRDI QIDQ1240356

Paul A. Binding

Publication date: 1979

Published in: Journal of Differential Equations (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-0396(79)90143-8




Related Items (22)

Some qualitative properties of solutions of higher-order lower semicontinus differential inclusionsOn the Cauchy problem for ordinary differential equations with discontinuous right-hand sidesDifferential equations with discontinuous right-hand sidesSharp uniqueness conditions for one-dimensional, autonomous ordinary differential equationsMarkovian solutions to discontinuous ODEsOn uniqueness criteria for systems of ordinary differential equationsDiscontinuous nonlocal conservation laws and related discontinuous ODEs -- existence, uniqueness, stability and regularityOn Carathéodory’s conditions for the initial value problemOn the Cauchy problem for a class of differential inclusions with applicationsA survey of recent results for the generalizations of ordinary differential equationsA necessary and sufficient condition for existence of solutions for differential inclusionsPeano's theorem for implicit differential equationsNon-autonomous scalar discontinuous ordinary differential equationNoncompact-type Krasnoselskii fixed-point theorems and their applicationsA new approximation scheme for first-order ordinary differential equations with non-negative right-hand sidesFirst-order singular and discontinuous differential equationsExistence of solutions for a class of discontinuous differential equations in \(\mathbb{R}^n\)Unnamed ItemA uniqueness criterion for ordinary differential equationsDarboux Problem with a Discontinuous Right-Hand SideLipschitzian solutions of the implicit Cauchy problem \(g(x')=f(t,x)\), \(x(0)=0\), with \(f\) discontinuous in \(x\).On first-order ordinary differential equations with nonnegative right-hand sides



Cites Work


This page was built for publication: The differential equation x=fox