Partial Differential Equation - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Partial Differential Equation - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Partial Differential Equation - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
In mathematics, a partial differential equation (PDE) is a differential equation that contains unknown multivariable functions and their partial derivatives. (This is in contrast to ordinary differential equations, which deal with functions of a single variable and its derivatives.) PDEs are used to formulate problems involving functions of several variables, and are either solved by hand, or used to create a relevant computer model. PDEs can be used to describe a wide variety of phenomena such as sound, heat, electrostatics, electrodynamics, fluid flow, or elasticity. These seemingly distinct physical phenomena can be formalised similarly in terms of PDEs. Just as ordinary differential equations often model onedimensional dynamical systems, partial differential equations often model multidimensional systems. PDEs find their generalisation in stochastic partial differential equations.
Contents
1 Introduction 2 Existence and uniqueness 3 Notation 4 Examples 4.1 Heat equation in one space dimension 4.2 Wave equation in one spatial dimension 4.3 Generalised heat-like equation in one space dimension 4.4 Spherical waves 4.5 Laplace equation in two dimensions 4.5.1 Connection with holomorphic functions 4.5.2 A typical boundary value problem 4.6 EulerTricomi equation 4.7 Advection equation 4.8 GinzburgLandau equation 4.9 The Dym equation 4.10 Initial-boundary value problems 4.10.1 Vibrating string 4.10.2 Vibrating membrane 4.11 Other examples 5 Classification 5.1 Equations of first order 5.2 Equations of second order 5.3 Systems of first-order equations and characteristic surfaces 5.4 Equations of mixed type 5.5 Infinite-order PDEs in quantum mechanics 6 Analytical methods to solve PDEs 6.1 Separation of variables
6.2 Method of characteristics 6.3 Integral transform 6.4 Change of variables 6.5 Fundamental solution 6.6 Superposition principle 6.7 Methods for non-linear equations 6.8 Lie group method 6.9 Semianalytical methods 7 Numerical methods to solve PDEs 7.1 Finite element method 7.2 Finite difference method 7.3 Finite volume method 8 See also 9 References 10 External links
Introduction
Partial differential equations (PDEs) are equations that involve rates of change with respect to continuous variables. The position of a rigid body is specified by six numbers, but the configuration of a fluid is given by the continuous distribution of several parameters, such as the temperature, pressure, and so forth. The dynamics for the rigid body take place in a finite-dimensional configuration space; the dynamics for the uid occur in an infinite-dimensional conguration space. This distinction usually makes PDEs much harder to solve than ordinary differential equations (ODEs), but here again there will be simple solutions for linear problems. Classic domains where PDEs are used include acoustics, fluid flow, electrodynamics, and heat transfer. A partial differential equation (PDE) for the function is an equation of the form
If F is a linear function of u and its derivatives, then the PDE is called linear. Common examples of linear PDEs include the heat equation, the wave equation, Laplace's equation, Helmholtz equation, KleinGordon equation, and Poisson's equation. A relatively simple PDE is
This relation implies that the function u(x ,y) is independent of x . However, the equation gives no information on the function's dependence on the variable y. Hence the general solution of this equation is
where c is any constant value. These two examples illustrate that general solutions of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) involve arbitrary constants, but solutions of PDEs involve arbitrary functions. A solution of a PDE is generally not unique; additional conditions must generally be specified on the boundary of the region where the solution is defined. For instance, in the simple example above, the function f(y) can be determined if u is specified on the line x = 0.
where n is an integer. The derivative of u with respect to y approaches 0 uniformly in x as n increases, but the solution is
This solution approaches infinity if nx is not an integer multiple of for any non-zero value of y. The Cauchy problem for the Laplace equation is called ill-posed or not well posed, since the solution does not depend continuously upon the data of the problem. Such ill-posed problems are not usually satisfactory for physical applications.
Notation
In PDEs, it is common to denote partial derivatives using subscripts. That is:
Especially in physics, del () is often used for spatial derivatives, and the wave equation (described below) can be written as
or
Examples
Heat equation in one space dimension
See also: Heat equation The equation for conduction of heat in one dimension for a homogeneous body has
where u(t ,x ) is temperature, and is a positive constant that describes the rate of diffusion. The Cauchy problem for this equation consists in specifying u(0, x )= f (x ), where f (x ) is an arbitrary function. General solutions of the heat equation can be found by the method of separation of variables. Some examples appear in the heat equation article. They are examples of Fourier series for periodic f and Fourier transforms for non-periodic f . Using the Fourier transform, a general solution of the heat equation has the form
where F is an arbitrary function. To satisfy the initial condition, F is given by the Fourier transform of f , that is
If f represents a very small but intense source of heat, then the preceding integral can be approximated by the delta distribution, multiplied by the strength of the source. For a source whose strength is normalized to 1, the result is
This result corresponds to the normal probability density for x with mean 0 and variance 2t . The heat equation and similar diffusion equations are useful tools to study random phenomena.
Here u might describe the displacement of a stretched string from equilibrium, or the difference in air pressure in a tube, or the magnitude of an electromagnetic field in a tube, and c is a number that corresponds to the velocity of the wave. The Cauchy problem for this equation consists in prescribing the initial displacement and velocity of a string or other medium:
where f and g are arbitrary given functions. The solution of this problem is given by d'Alembert's formula:
This formula implies that the solution at (t ,x ) depends only upon the data on the segment of the initial line that is cut out by the characteristic curves
that are drawn backwards from that point. These curves correspond to signals that propagate with velocity c forward and backward. Conversely, the influence of the data at any given point on the initial line propagates with the finite velocity c: there is no effect outside a triangle through that point whose sides are characteristic curves. This behavior is very different from the solution for the heat equation, where the effect of a point source appears (with small amplitude) instantaneously at every point in space. The solution given above is also valid if t < 0, and the explicit formula shows that the solution depends smoothly upon the data: both the forward and backward Cauchy problems for the wave equation are well-posed.
where
is a SturmLiouville operator (However it should be noted this operator may in fact be of the form
where w(x ) is the weighting function with respect to which the eigenfunctions of coordinate. Subject to the boundary conditions:
Then: If:
where
Spherical waves
Spherical waves are waves whose amplitude depends only upon the radial distance r from a central point source. For such waves, the three-dimensional wave equation takes the form
This is equivalent to
and hence the quantity ru satisfies the one-dimensional wave equation. Therefore a general solution for spherical waves has the form
where F and G are completely arbitrary functions. Radiation from an antenna corresponds to the case where G is identically zero. Thus the wave form transmitted from an antenna has no distortion in time: the only distorting factor is 1/r. This feature of undistorted propagation of waves is not present if there are two spatial dimensions.
Solutions of Laplace's equation are called harmonic functions. Connection with holomorphic functions Solutions of the Laplace equation in two dimensions are intimately connected with analytic functions of a complex variable (a.k.a. holomorphic functions): the real and imaginary parts of any analytic function are conjugate harmonic functions: they both satisfy the Laplace equation, and their gradients are orthogonal. If f =u+iv , then the CauchyRiemann equations state that
Conversely, given any harmonic function in two dimensions, it is the real part of an analytic function, at least locally. Details are given in Laplace equation. A typical boundary value problem A typical problem for Laplace's equation is to find a solution that satisfies arbitrary values on the boundary of a domain. For example, we may seek a harmonic function that takes on the values u() on a circle of radius one. The solution was given by Poisson:
Petrovsky (1967, p. 248) shows how this formula can be obtained by summing a Fourier series for . If r < 1, the derivatives of may be computed by differentiating under the integral sign, and one can verify that is analytic, even if u is continuous but not necessarily differentiable. This behavior is typical for solutions of elliptic partial differential equations: the solutions may be much more smooth than the boundary data. This is in contrast to solutions of the wave equation, and more general hyperbolic partial differential equations, which typically have no more derivatives than the data.
EulerTricomi equation
The EulerTricomi equation is used in the investigation of transonic flow.
Advection equation
The advection equation describes the transport of a conserved scalar in a velocity field u = (u, v , w). It is:
If the velocity field is solenoidal (that is, u), then the equation may be simplified to
In the one-dimensional case where u is not constant and is equal to , the equation is referred to as Burgers' equation.
GinzburgLandau equation
The GinzburgLandau equation is used in modelling superconductivity. It is
where
where the constant k must be determined. The boundary conditions then imply that X is a multiple of sin kx , and k must have the form
where n is an integer. Each term in the sum corresponds to a mode of vibration of the string. The mode with n = 1 is called the fundamental mode, and the frequencies of the other modes are all multiples of this frequency. They form the overtone series of the string, and they are the basis for musical acoustics. The initial conditions may then be satisfied by representing f and g as infinite sums of these modes. Wind instruments typically correspond to vibrations of an air column with one end open and one end closed. The corresponding boundary conditions are
The method of separation of variables can also be applied in this case, and it leads to a series of odd overtones. The general problem of this type is solved in SturmLiouville theory. Vibrating membrane If a membrane is stretched over a curve C that forms the boundary of a domain D in the plane, its vibrations are governed by the wave equation
if t >0 and (x ,y) is in D. The boundary condition is u(t,x,y) = 0 if (x,y) is on C. The method of separation of variables leads to the form
The latter equation is called the Helmholtz Equation. The constant k must be determined to allow a non-trivial v to satisfy the boundary condition on C. Such values of k 2 are called the eigenvalues of the Laplacian in D, and the associated solutions are the eigenfunctions of the Laplacian in D. The SturmLiouville theory may be extended to this elliptic eigenvalue problem (Jost, 2002).
Other examples
The Schrdinger equation is a PDE at the heart of non-relativistic quantum mechanics. In the WKB approximation it is the HamiltonJacobi equation.
Except for the Dym equation and the GinzburgLandau equation, the above equations are linear in the sense that they can be written in the form Au = f for a given linear operator A and a given function f . Other important non-linear equations include the NavierStokes equations describing the flow of fluids, and Einstein's field equations of general relativity. Also see the list of non-linear partial differential equations.
Classification
Some linear, second-order partial differential equations can be classified as parabolic, hyperbolic and elliptic. Others such as the EulerTricomi equation have different types in different regions. The classification provides a guide to appropriate initial and boundary conditions, and to smoothness of the solutions.
where the coefficients A, B, C etc. may depend upon x and y. If over a region of the xy plane, the PDE is second-order in that region. This form is analogous to the equation for a conic section:
More precisely, replacing x by X, and likewise for other variables (formally this is done by a Fourier transform), converts a constant-coefficient PDE into a polynomial of the same degree, with the top degree (a homogeneous polynomial, here a quadratic form) being most significant for the classification. Just as one classifies conic sections and quadratic forms into parabolic, hyperbolic, and elliptic based on the discriminant , the same can be done for a second-order PDE at a given point. However, the discriminant in a PDE is given by due to the convention of the xy term being 2B rather than B; formally, the discriminant (of the associated quadratic form) is with the factor of 4 dropped for simplicity. 1. : solutions of elliptic PDEs are as smooth as the coefficients allow, within the interior of the region where the equation and solutions are defined. For example, solutions of Laplace's equation are analytic within the domain where they are defined, but solutions may assume boundary values that are not smooth. The motion of a fluid at subsonic speeds can be approximated with elliptic PDEs, and the Euler Tricomi equation is elliptic where x < 0. 2. : equations that are parabolic at every point can be transformed into a form analogous to the heat equation by a change of independent variables. Solutions smooth out as the transformed time variable increases. The EulerTricomi equation has parabolic type on the line where x = 0. 3. : hyperbolic equations retain any discontinuities of functions or derivatives in the initial data. An example is the wave equation. The motion of a fluid at supersonic speeds can be approximated with hyperbolic PDEs, and the EulerTricomi equation is hyperbolic where x > 0.
If there are n independent variables x 1, x 2 , ..., x n , a general linear partial differential equation of second order has the form
The classification depends upon the signature of the eigenvalues of the coefficient matrix ai,j.. 1. Elliptic: The eigenvalues are all positive or all negative. 2. Parabolic : The eigenvalues are all positive or all negative, save one that is zero. 3. Hyperbolic: There is only one negative eigenvalue and all the rest are positive, or there is only one positive eigenvalue and all the rest are negative. 4. Ultrahyperbolic: There is more than one positive eigenvalue and more than one negative eigenvalue, and there are no zero eigenvalues. There is only limited theory for ultrahyperbolic equations (Courant and Hilbert, 1962).
where the coefficient matrices A and the vector B may depend upon x and u. If a hypersurface S is given in the implicit form
where has a non-zero gradient, then S is a characteristic surface for the operator L at a given point if the characteristic form vanishes:
The geometric interpretation of this condition is as follows: if data for u are prescribed on the surface S, then it may be possible to determine the normal derivative of u on S from the differential equation. If the data on S and the differential equation determine the normal derivative of u on S, then S is non-characteristic. If the data on S and the differential equation do not determine the normal derivative of u on S, then the surface is characteristic, and the differential equation restricts the data on S: the differential equation is internal to S. 1. A first-order system Lu=0 is elliptic if no surface is characteristic for L: the values of u on S and the differential equation always determine the normal derivative of u on S. 2. A first-order system is hyperbolic at a point if there is a space-like surface S with normal at that point. This means that, given any non-trivial vector orthogonal to , and a scalar multiplier , the equation
has m real roots 1, 2, ..., m. The system is strictly hyperbolic if these roots are always distinct. The geometrical interpretation of this condition is as follows: the characteristic form Q() = 0 defines a cone (the normal cone) with homogeneous coordinates . In the hyperbolic case, this cone has m sheets, and the axis = runs inside these sheets: it does not intersect any of them. But when displaced from the origin by , this axis intersects every sheet. In the elliptic case, the normal cone has no real sheets.
which is called elliptic-hyperbolic because it is elliptic in the region x < 0, hyperbolic in the region x > 0, and degenerate parabolic on the line x = 0.
Method of characteristics
Main article: Method of characteristics
In special cases, one can find characteristic curves on which the equation reduces to an ODE changing coordinates in the domain to straighten these curves allows separation of variables, and is called the method of characteristics. More generally, one may find characteristic surfaces.
Integral transform
An integral transform may transform the PDE to a simpler one, in particular a separable PDE. This corresponds to diagonalizing an operator. An important example of this is Fourier analysis, which diagonalizes the heat equation using the eigenbasis of sinusoidal waves. If the domain is finite or periodic, an infinite sum of solutions such as a Fourier series is appropriate, but an integral of solutions such as a Fourier integral is generally required for infinite domains. The solution for a point source for the heat equation given above is an example for use of a Fourier integral.
Change of variables
Often a PDE can be reduced to a simpler form with a known solution by a suitable change of variables. For example the BlackScholes PDE
by the change of variables (for complete details see Solution of the Black Scholes Equation (http://web.archive.org/web/20080411030405/http://www.math.unl.edu/~sdunbar1/Teaching/MathematicalFina nce/Lessons/BlackScholes/Solution/solution.shtml))
Fundamental solution
Main article: Fundamental solution Inhomogeneous equations can often be solved (for constant coefficient PDEs, always be solved) by finding the fundamental solution (the solution for a point source), then taking the convolution with the boundary conditions to get the solution. This is analogous in signal processing to understanding a filter by its impulse response.
Superposition principle
Because any superposition of solutions of a linear, homogeneous PDE is again a solution, the particular solutions may then be combined to obtain more general solutions.
Semianalytical methods
The adomian decomposition method, the Lyapunov artificial small parameter method, and He's homotopy perturbation method are all special cases of the more general homotopy analysis method. These are series expansion methods, and except for the Lyapunov method, are independent of small physical parameters as compared to the well known perturbation theory, thus giving these methods greater flexibility and solution generality.
See also
Boundary value problem Difference equation Dirichlet boundary condition Laplace transform applied to differential equations List of dynamical systems and differential equations topics Matrix differential equation Neumann boundary condition Numerical partial differential equations Ordinary differential equation Partial differential algebraic equation
Robin boundary condition Separation of variables Stochastic partial differential equations Stochastic processes and boundary value problems Waves
References
Adomian, G. (1994). Solving Frontier problems of Physics: The decomposition method. Kluwer Academic Publishers. Courant, R. & Hilbert, D. (1962), Methods of Mathematical Physics II, New York: WileyInterscience. Evans, L. C. (1998), Partial Differential Equations, Providence: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 0-8218-0772-2. Ibragimov, Nail H (1993), CRC Handbook of Lie Group Analysis of Differential Equations Vol. 1-3, Providence: CRC-Press, ISBN 0-8493-4488-3. John, F. (1982), Partial Differential Equations (4th ed.), New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 0-38790609-6. Jost, J. (2002), Partial Differential Equations, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 0-387-95428-7. Lewy, Hans (1957), "An example of a smooth linear partial differential equation without solution", Annals of Mathematics. Second Series 66 (1): 155158. Liao, S.J. (2003), Beyond Perturbation: Introduction to the Homotopy Analysis Method, Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/ CRC Press, ISBN 1-58488-407-X Olver, P.J. (1995), Equivalence, Invariants and Symmetry, Cambridge Press. Petrovskii, I. G. (1967), Partial Differential Equations, Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Co.. Pinchover, Y. & Rubinstein, J. (2005), An Introduction to Partial Differential Equations, New York: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-84886-5. Polyanin, A. D. (2002), Handbook of Linear Partial Differential Equations for Engineers and Scientists, Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/CRC Press, ISBN 1-58488-299-9. Polyanin, A. D. & Zaitsev, V. F. (2004), Handbook of Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations, Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/CRC Press, ISBN 1-58488-355-3. Polyanin, A. D.; Zaitsev, V. F. & Moussiaux, A. (2002), Handbook of First Order Partial Differential Equations, London: Taylor & Francis, ISBN 0-415-27267-X. Solin, P. (2005), Partial Differential Equations and the Finite Element Method, Hoboken, NJ: J. Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-72070-4. Solin, P.; Segeth, K. & Dolezel, I. (2003), Higher-Order Finite Element Methods, Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/CRC Press, ISBN 1-58488-438-X. Stephani, H. (1989), Differential Equations: Their Solution Using Symmetries. Edited by M. MacCallum, Cambridge University Press. Wazwaz, Abdul-Majid (2009). Partial Differential Equations and Solitary Waves Theory. Higher Education Press. ISBN 90-5809-369-7. Zwillinger, D. (1997), Handbook of Differential Equations (3rd ed.), Boston: Academic Press, ISBN 0-12-784395-7. Gershenfeld, N. (1999), The Nature of Mathematical Modeling (1st ed.), New York: Cambridge University Press, New York, NY, USA, ISBN 0-521-57095-6.
External links
Partial Differential Equations: Exact Solutions (http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/pde-en.htm) at EqWorld: The World of Mathematical Equations. Partial Differential Equations: Index (http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/eqindex/eqindex-pde.htm) at EqWorld: The World of Mathematical Equations. Partial Differential Equations: Methods (http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/methods/meth-pde.htm) at EqWorld: The World of Mathematical Equations. Example problems with solutions (http://www.exampleproblems.com/wiki/index.php? title=Partial_Differential_Equations) at exampleproblems.com Partial Differential Equations (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PartialDifferentialEquation.html) at mathworld.wolfram.com Partial Differential Equations (http://www.nag.com/numeric/fl/nagdoc_fl24/html/D03/d03intro.html) at nag.com Dispersive PDE Wiki (http://tosio.math.toronto.edu/wiki/index.php/Main_Page) NEQwiki, the nonlinear equations encyclopedia (http://www.primat.mephi.ru/wiki/) Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Partial_differential_equation&oldid=570777821" Categories: Multivariable calculus Differential equations Partial differential equations This page was last modified on 31 August 2013 at 19:40. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.