Equations with only one leading-order term are possible, but rare. For example, the equation 100 = 1 + 1 + 1 + ... + 1, (where the right hand side comprises one hundred 1's). For any particular combination of values for the variables and parameters, an equation will typically contain at least two leading-order terms, and other
lower-order terms. In this case, by making the assumption that the lower-order terms, and the parts of the leading-order terms that are the same size as the lower-order terms (perhaps the second or third
significant figure onwards), are negligible, a new equation may be formed by dropping all these lower-order terms and parts of the leading-order terms. The remaining terms provide the
leading-order equation, or
leading-order balance, or
dominant balance, and creating a new equation just involving these terms is known as
taking an equation to leading-order. The solutions to this new equation are called the
leading-order solutions to the original equation. Analysing the behaviour given by this new equation gives the
leading-order behaviour of the model for these values of the variables and parameters. The size of the error in making this approximation is normally roughly the size of the largest neglected term. Suppose we want to understand the leading-order behaviour of the example above. • When
x = 0.001, the
x3 and 5
x terms may be regarded as negligible, and dropped, along with any values in the third decimal places onwards in the two remaining terms. This gives the leading-order balance
y = 0.1. Thus the leading-order behaviour of this equation at
x=0.001 is that
y is constant. • Similarly, when
x = 10, the 5
x and 0.1 terms may be regarded as negligible, and dropped, along with any values in the third significant figure onwards in the two remaining terms. This gives the leading-order balance
y =
x3. Thus the leading-order behaviour of this equation at
x=10 is that
y increases cubically with
x. The main behaviour of
y may thus be investigated at any value of
x. The leading-order behaviour is more complicated when more terms are leading-order. At
x=2 there is a leading-order balance between the cubic and linear dependencies of
y on
x. Note that this description of finding leading-order balances and behaviours gives only an outline description of the process – it is not mathematically rigorous. ==Next-to-leading order==