If an equation tells us how a system changes right now, can we use it to predict the future?
An ordinary equation tells you what something is. A differential equation tells you how it is changing—and asks you to reconstruct what happens next.
Newton and Leibniz create tools for expressing velocity, acceleration, growth, and changing quantities.
Euler develops systematic ways to approximate solutions step by step.
Differential equations become central to engineering, biology, economics, weather, circuits, and nearly every part of physics.
A differential equation may not draw the solution directly. Instead, it tells the slope the solution should have at every point.
Click anywhere in the field to place a starting point and trace one possible solution.
Start at a known point. Move a little, use the slope there, then repeat. Smaller steps create a more faithful prediction.
A spring's acceleration depends on how far it is stretched. Add damping, and the motion slowly loses energy.
The same broad idea—change depends on the current state—creates very different futures.
A differential equation can produce steady growth, oscillation, decay, equilibrium, or instability depending on its structure and starting conditions.
The same rule can create different paths depending on where the system begins and how fast it is already moving.
A first-order equation tracks one layer of change. A second-order equation can include acceleration and therefore needs more starting information.
Linear systems combine neatly. Nonlinear systems can bend, saturate, couple, and sometimes become chaotic.
Some equations have exact formulas. Many important ones can only be explored with numerical approximation.
The symbol is only the doorway. The real exhibit is the connection it reveals.
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