Find a linear differential operator that annihilates the given function

Find a linear differential operator that annihilates the given function. (Use D for the differential operator.)

For, 1+6x – 2×3 and, e-x + 2xex – x2ex

The Correct Answer And Explanation is:

To find a linear differential operator that annihilates a function means to find a differential operator $L(D)$, where $D = \frac{d}{dx}$, such that:

$$
L(D)[f(x)] = 0
$$

We are given two functions:

  1. $f_1(x) = 1 + 6x – 2x^3$
  2. $f_2(x) = e^{-x} + 2x e^x – x^2 e^x$

We will find the annihilator for each function separately and then combine them.


🔹 Part 1: Polynomial Function

Function:

$$
f_1(x) = 1 + 6x – 2x^3
$$

This is a polynomial of degree 3. The annihilator for any polynomial of degree $n$ is:

$$
D^{n+1}
$$

So here, since the highest power is $x^3$, we use:

$$
D^4
$$

Why? Because differentiating a cubic polynomial four times gives zero:

$$
D[1 + 6x – 2x^3] = 6 – 6x^2,\quad D^2 = -12x,\quad D^3 = -12,\quad D^4 = 0
$$

Thus, the annihilator is:

$$
L_1(D) = D^4
$$


🔹 Part 2: Exponential Function

Function:

$$
f_2(x) = e^{-x} + 2x e^x – x^2 e^x
$$

This is a linear combination of:

  • $e^{-x}$
  • $x e^x$
  • $x^2 e^x$

✅ Step 1: Annihilator of $e^{-x}$

Annihilator is:

$$
(D + 1)
$$

✅ Step 2: Annihilator of $x^2 e^x$

The annihilator for $x^n e^{ax}$ is:

$$
(D – a)^{n+1}
$$

So for $x^2 e^x$, it is:

$$
(D – 1)^3
$$

✅ Combine Both

To annihilate all terms in $f_2(x)$, we take the least common multiple (LCM) of the individual annihilators:

$$
L_2(D) = (D + 1)(D – 1)^3
$$


✅ Final Answer

To annihilate the full expression:

$$
f(x) = f_1(x) + f_2(x) = 1 + 6x – 2x^3 + e^{-x} + 2x e^x – x^2 e^x
$$

We combine the two operators:

  • From Part 1: $D^4$
  • From Part 2: $(D + 1)(D – 1)^3$

So the final annihilator is:

$$
\boxed{D^4 (D + 1)(D – 1)^3}
$$

This is the differential operator that, when applied to the full function, gives zero.

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