In mathematics, an ordinary differential equation is called a Bernoulli differential equation if it is of the form

where
is a real number. Some authors allow any real
, whereas others require that
not be 0 or 1. The equation was first discussed in a work of 1695 by Jacob Bernoulli, after whom it is named. The earliest solution, however, was offered by Gottfried Leibniz, who published his result in the same year and whose method is the one still used today.
Bernoulli equations are special because they are nonlinear differential equations with known exact solutions. A notable special case of the Bernoulli equation is the logistic differential equation.
Transformation to a linear differential equation
When
, the differential equation is linear. When
, it is separable. In these cases, standard techniques for solving equations of those forms can be applied. For
and
, the substitution
reduces any Bernoulli equation to a linear differential equation

For example, in the case
, making the substitution
in the differential equation
produces the equation
, which is a linear differential equation.
Solution
Let
and

be a solution of the linear differential equation

Then we have that
is a solution of
![{\displaystyle y'(x)=P(x)y(x)+Q(x)y^{\alpha }(x)\ ,\ y(x_{0})=y_{0}:=[z(x_{0})]^{\frac {1}{1-\alpha }}.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/e8d142ccd897e6ca1e75a9ff1da709df6341292a)
And for every such differential equation, for all
we have
as solution for
.
Example
Consider the Bernoulli equation

(in this case, more specifically Riccati's equation).
The constant function
is a solution.
Division by
yields

Changing variables gives the equations

which can be solved using the integrating factor

Multiplying by
,

The left side can be represented as the derivative of
by reversing the product rule. Applying the chain rule and integrating both sides with respect to
results in the equations

The solution for
is

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