$$ \frac{dx}{dt} = \vec f(x(t), x(t-\tau), x(t-\tau_2), ..., x(t-\tau_n)) $$ Example: First order DE $$ \frac{dx}{ct} = -x \rightarrow x(t) = x_0e^{-t}$$ First order DDE: $$\frac{dx}{dt} = -x(t-1)$$ This is a problem. We cannot use an initial value, we need **an initial history function (IHF)**. This is the behaviour of x(t) defined in an interval $[-\tau_0, 0]$, assuming solution time starts at $t=0$ ## Method of Steps Think of DDE as being a mapping between the past interval and the present interval $$x(t) = \phi_{i-1}(t)$$ on any interval $[t_i-1,t_i]$ $$\int_{\phi_{i-1}(t)}^{x(t)}dx' = - \int_{t_i}^t \phi_{i-1}(t' - 1)dt'$$ Then after some steps $$\frac{dx}{dt} = -x(t-1) \rightarrow dx' = -x'(t'-1)dt'$$ And then this can be solved at each interval. - This gets annoying. - Need to solve at each interval over and over. ## Stability of DDEs For ODE: equilibrium point is 0 of derivative For DDE: dx/dt is still 0