In mathematics, and in particular in the theory of solitons, the Dym equation (HD) is the third-order partial differential equation
It is often written in the equivalent form for some function v of one space variable and time
The Dym equation first appeared in Kruskal [1] and is attributed to an unpublished paper by Harry Dym.
The Dym equation represents a system in which dispersion and nonlinearity are coupled together. HD is a completely integrable nonlinear evolution equation that may be solved by means of the inverse scattering transform. It obeys an infinite number of conservation laws; it does not possess the Painlevé property.
The Dym equation has strong links to the Korteweg–de Vries equation. C.S. Gardner, J.M. Greene, Kruskal and R.M. Miura applied [Dym equation] to the solution of corresponding problem in Korteweg–de Vries equation. The Lax pair of the Harry Dym equation is associated with the Sturm–Liouville operator. The Liouville transformation transforms this operator isospectrally into the Schrödinger operator.[2] Thus by the inverse Liouville transformation solutions of the Korteweg–de Vries equation are transformed into solutions of the Dym equation. An explicit solution of the Dym equation, valid in a finite interval, is found by an auto-Bäcklund transform[2]
Notes
edit- ^ Martin Kruskal Nonlinear Wave Equations. In Jürgen Moser, editor, Dynamical Systems, Theory and Applications, volume 38 of Lecture Notes in Physics, pages 310–354. Heidelberg. Springer. 1975.
- ^ a b Fritz Gesztesy and Karl Unterkofler, Isospectral deformations for Sturm–Liouville and Dirac-type operators and associated nonlinear evolution equations, Rep. Math. Phys. 31 (1992), 113–137.
References
edit- Cercignani, Carlo; David H. Sattinger (1998). Scaling limits and models in physical processes. Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag. ISBN 0-8176-5985-4.
- Kichenassamy, Satyanad (1996). Nonlinear wave equations. Marcel Dekker. ISBN 0-8247-9328-5.
- Gesztesy, Fritz; Holden, Helge (2003). Soliton equations and their algebro-geometric solutions. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-75307-4.
- Olver, Peter J. (1993). Applications of Lie groups to differential equations, 2nd ed. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-94007-3.
- Vassiliou, P.J. (2001) [1994], "Harry Dym equation", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press