5 votes 5 votes The differential equation $\frac{d^2 y}{dx^2}+\frac{dy}{dx}+\sin y =0$ is: linear non- linear homogeneous of degree two Calculus gate1993 calculus differential-equation easy out-of-gate-syllabus multiple-selects + – Kathleen asked Sep 13, 2014 • recategorized Apr 22, 2021 by Lakshman Bhaiya Kathleen 1.6k views answer comment Share Follow See all 0 reply Please log in or register to add a comment.
Best answer 3 votes 3 votes Answer: A The differential equation is a non-homogeneous equation. The degree of a differential equation is the power of the highest order derivative in the equation. Here the degree is 1. Rajarshi Sarkar answered Apr 26, 2015 • selected Apr 27, 2015 by Arjun Rajarshi Sarkar comment Share Follow See all 2 Comments See all 2 2 Comments reply Digvijay Pandey commented Apr 26, 2015 reply Follow Share degree is 1 so it should be linear na ??? 0 votes 0 votes Rajarshi Sarkar commented Apr 27, 2015 reply Follow Share Yes, you are right. Corrected. 0 votes 0 votes Please log in or register to add a comment.