Dispersionless equation

Dispersionless (or quasi-classical) limits of integrable partial differential equations (PDE) arise in various problems of mathematics and physics and have been intensively studied in recent literature (see e.g. references below). They typically arise when considering slowly modulated long waves of an integrable dispersive PDE system.

Examples edit

Dispersionless KP equation edit

The dispersionless Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation (dKPE), also known (up to an inessential linear change of variables) as the Khokhlov–Zabolotskaya equation, has the form

 

It arises from the commutation

 

of the following pair of 1-parameter families of vector fields

 
 

where   is a spectral parameter. The dKPE is the  -dispersionless limit of the celebrated Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation, arising when considering long waves of that system. The dKPE, like many other (2+1)-dimensional integrable dispersionless systems, admits a (3+1)-dimensional generalization.[1]

The Benney moment equations edit

The dispersionless KP system is closely related to the Benney moment hierarchy, each of which is a dispersionless integrable system:

 

These arise as the consistency condition between

 

and the simplest two evolutions in the hierarchy are:

 
 

The dKP is recovered on setting

 

and eliminating the other moments, as well as identifying   and  .

If one sets  , so that the countably many moments   are expressed in terms of just two functions, the classical shallow water equations result:

 
 

These may also be derived from considering slowly modulated wave train solutions of the nonlinear Schrodinger equation. Such 'reductions', expressing the moments in terms of finitely many dependent variables, are described by the Gibbons-Tsarev equation.

Dispersionless Korteweg–de Vries equation edit

The dispersionless Korteweg–de Vries equation (dKdVE) reads as

 

It is the dispersionless or quasiclassical limit of the Korteweg–de Vries equation. It is satisfied by  -independent solutions of the dKP system. It is also obtainable from the  -flow of the Benney hierarchy on setting

 

Dispersionless Novikov–Veselov equation edit

The dispersionless Novikov-Veselov equation is most commonly written as the following equation for a real-valued function  :

 

where the following standard notation of complex analysis is used:  ,  . The function   here is an auxiliary function, defined uniquely from   up to a holomorphic summand.

Multidimensional integrable dispersionless systems edit

See [1] for systems with contact Lax pairs, and e.g.,[2][3] and references therein for other systems.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Sergyeyev, A. (2018). "New integrable (3 + 1)-dimensional systems and contact geometry". Letters in Mathematical Physics. 108 (2): 359–376. arXiv:1401.2122. Bibcode:2018LMaPh.108..359S. doi:10.1007/s11005-017-1013-4. S2CID 119159629.
  2. ^ Calderbank, David M. J.; Kruglikov, Boris (2021). "Integrability via geometry: dispersionless differential equations in three and four dimensions". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 382 (3): 1811–1841. arXiv:1612.02753. doi:10.1007/s00220-020-03913-y. MR 4232780.
  3. ^ Kruglikov, Boris; Morozov, Oleg (2015). "Integrable Dispersionless PDEs in 4D, Their Symmetry Pseudogroups and Deformations". Letters in Mathematical Physics. 105 (12): 1703–1723. arXiv:1410.7104. Bibcode:2015LMaPh.105.1703K. doi:10.1007/s11005-015-0800-z. S2CID 119326497.

Bibliography edit

External links edit