Differential comparison theorem
In mathematical theory of differential equations the Chaplygin's theorem (Chaplygin's method) states about existence and uniqueness of the solution to an initial value problem for the first order explicit ordinary differential equation. This theorem was stated by Sergey Chaplygin. It is one of many comparison theorems.
Important definitions
Consider an initial value problem: differential equation
in
, 
with an initial condition
.
For the initial value problem described above the upper boundary solution and the lower boundary solution are the functions
and
respectively, both of which are smooth in
and continuous in
, such as the following inequalities are true:
;
and
for
.
Statement
Source:
Given the aforementioned initial value problem and respective upper boundary solution
and lower boundary solution
for
. If the right part 
- is continuous in
,
; - satisfies the Lipschitz condition over variable
between functions
and
: there exists constant
such as for every
,
,
the inequality
holds,
then in
there exists one and only one solution
for the given initial value problem and moreover for all ![{\displaystyle t\in \left[t_{0};\alpha \right]}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/f8d6ac6ebf10aed2bc1ecb0328fb2c10ad5a5012)
.
Source:
Weakening inequalities
Inside inequalities within both of definitions of the upper boundary solution and the lower boundary solution signs of inequalities (all at once) can be altered to unstrict. As a result, inequalities sings at Chaplygin's theorem concusion would change to unstrict by
and
respectively. In particular, any of
,
could be chosen.
Proving inequality only
If
is already known to be an existent solution for the initial value problem in
, the Lipschitz condition requirement can be omitted entirely for proving the resulting inequality. There exists applications for this method while researching whether the solution is stable or not ( pp. 7–9). This is often called "Differential inequality method" in literature and, for example, Grönwall's inequality can be proven using this technique.
Continuation of the solution towards positive infinity
Chaplygin's theorem answers the question about existence and uniqueness of the solution in
and the constant
from the Lipschitz condition is, generally speaking, dependent on
:
. If for
both functions
and
retain their smoothness and for
a set
is bounded, the theorem holds for all
.
References
Further reading