Mixing problem- integrating factors
Differential Equations Chapter 1.9 Interpreting a mixing problem and solving it using the method of integrating factors. Suppose a 200-gallon tank originally has 100 gallons of salt water in it at a concentration of 1 gram of salt per gallon. We start to pour in 5 gallons of salt water per minute having a concentration of 2 grams of salt per gallon. Meanwhile, we let out 3 gallons of well-mixed water per minute. What is the concentration of salt when the tank is full? Errata: 5:04, should read "100+2t" not "100-2t" 7:59, u-substitution, not integration by parts

▶︎
First Order Linear Differential Equation & Integrating Factor (introduction & example)

▶︎
Bifurcations (graphical method) (full video)

▶︎
Mixing Salt and Water with Changing Volume

▶︎
Türkei – USA Highlights | Gruppe D, FIFA WM 2026 | sportstudio

▶︎
Physics Students Need to Know These 5 Methods for Differential Equations

▶︎
Oxford Calculus: Integrating Factors Explained

▶︎
What are Differential Equations and how do they work?

▶︎
Method of Integrating Factor

▶︎
Differential Equation Mixing Problem, calculus 2 tutorial

▶︎
The Method of Integrating Factors for Linear 1st Order ODEs **full example**

▶︎
This is why you're learning differential equations

▶︎
Solving First order linear differential equation

▶︎
الرقية الشرعية للشفاءمن السحروالعين والحسد حصن من الشيطان رقية البيت والاولاد بصوت القارئ سعيد حمدان

▶︎
Why Aliens Would NEVER Invade Africa

▶︎
Mixing Problems and Separable Differential Equations - Calculus 2

▶︎
Second order differential equation for spring-mass systems

▶︎
calculus 2 mixing problem, CSTR, differential equation application

▶︎
Japan – Schweden Highlights | Gruppe F, FIFA WM 2026 | sportstudio

▶︎
Mixing Salt and Water - First Order Differential Equations

▶︎
