Weeks manifold: Difference between revisions

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en>David Eppstein
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m Link repair: Figure eight knot (mathematics) -> Figure-eight knot (mathematics) - You can help!
 
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{{Refimprove|date=October 2008}}
The author's name is Andera and she believes it sounds fairly good. My wife and I live in Mississippi but now I'm considering other options. He works as a bookkeeper. To climb is some thing I truly enjoy performing.<br><br>Review my homepage; online reader - [https://www.machlitim.org.il/subdomain/megila/end/node/12300 www.machlitim.org.il],
[[File:Ile de ré.JPG|thumb|right|300px|Crossing [[swell (ocean)|swell]]s, consisting of near-cnoidal wave trains. Photo taken from Phares des Baleines (Whale Lighthouse) at the western point of [[Île de Ré]] (Isle of Rhé), France, in the [[Atlantic Ocean]]. The interaction of such near-[[soliton]]s in shallow water may be modeled through the Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation.]]
In [[mathematics]] and [[physics]], the '''Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation''' – or '''KP equation''', named after Boris Borisovich Kadomtsev and Vladimir Iosifovich Petviashvili – is a [[partial differential equation]] to describe [[nonlinear]] [[wave motion]]. The KP equation is usually written as:
:<math>\displaystyle \partial_x(\partial_t u+u \partial_x u+\epsilon^2\partial_{xxx}u)+\lambda\partial_{yy}u=0</math>
where <math>\lambda=\pm 1</math>.  The above form shows that the KP equation is a generalization to two [[spatial dimension]]s, ''x'' and ''y'', of the one-dimensional [[Korteweg–de Vries equation|Korteweg–de Vries (KdV) equation]]. To be physically meaningful, the wave propagation direction has to be not-too-far from the ''x'' direction, i.e. with only slow variations of solutions in the ''y'' direction.   
 
Like the KdV equation, the KP equation is completely integrable.  It can also be solved using the [[inverse scattering transform]] much like the [[nonlinear Schrödinger equation]].
 
==History==
 
[[File:RIAN archive 151311 Russian physicist Boris Kadomtsev.jpg|thumb|right|180px|Boris Kadomtsev.]]
The KP equation was first written in 1970 by Soviet physicists Boris B. Kadomtsev (1928–1998) and Vladimir I. Petviashvili (1936–1993); it came as a natural generalization of the KdV equation (derived by Korteweg and De Vries in 1895).  Whereas in the KdV equation waves are strictly one-dimensional, in the KP equation this restriction is relaxed. Still, both in the KdV and the KP equation, waves have to travel in the positive ''x''-direction.
 
==Connections to physics==
 
The KP equation can be used to model [[water wave]]s of long [[wavelength]] with weakly non-linear restoring forces and [[dispersion (water waves)|frequency dispersion]].  If [[surface tension]] is weak compared to [[Earth's gravity|gravitational forces]], <math>\lambda=+1</math> is used; if surface tension is strong, then <math>\lambda=-1</math>.  Because of the asymmetry in the way ''x''- and ''y''-terms enter the equation, the waves described by the KP equation behave differently in the direction of propagation (''x''-direction) and transverse (''y'') direction; oscillations in the ''y''-direction tend to be smoother (be of small-deviation).
 
The KP equation can also be used to model waves in [[Ferromagnetism|ferromagnetic]] media, as well as two-dimensional matter–wave pulses in [[Bose–Einstein condensate]]s.
 
==Limiting behavior==
 
For <math>\epsilon\ll 1</math>, typical ''x''-dependent oscillations have a wavelength of <math>O(1/\epsilon)</math> giving a singular limiting regime as <math>\epsilon\rightarrow 0</math>. The limit <math>\epsilon\rightarrow 0</math> is called the [[Dispersionless equation|dispersion]]less limit.
 
If we also assume that the solutions are independent of ''y'' as <math>\epsilon\rightarrow 0</math>, then they also satisfy [[Burgers' equation]]:
:<math>\displaystyle \partial_t u+u\partial_x u=0.</math>
 
Suppose the amplitude of oscillations of a solution is asymptotically small — <math>O(\epsilon)</math> — in the dispersionless limit.  Then the amplitude satisfies a mean-field equation of [[Davey–Stewartson equations|Davey–Stewartson]] type.
 
==See also==
* [[Novikov–Veselov equation]]
 
==References==
* {{Cite journal|first1=B. B.|last1=Kadomtsev|first2=V. I.|last2=Petviashvili|title=On the stability of solitary waves in weakly dispersive media|journal=Sov. Phys. Dokl.|volume=15|year=1970|pages=539–541|bibcode = 1970SPhD...15..539K }}. Translation of {{cite journal| title=Об устойчивости уединенных волн в слабо диспергирующих средах | journal=[[Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR]] | volume=192 | issue= | pages=753–756}}
* {{Springer|id=K/k120110|first=Emma|last=Previato}}
 
==External links==
* {{mathworld|urlname=Kadomtsev-PetviashviliEquation|title=Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation}}
* {{scholarpedia | urlname=Kadomtsev-Petviashvili_equation | title=Kadomtsev–Petviashvili equation | curator=Gioni Biondini and Dmitri Pelinovsky }}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.amath.washington.edu/~bernard/kp.html | title=The KP page | author=Bernard Deconinck | publisher=[[University of Washington]], Department of Applied Mathematics }}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kadomtsev-Petviashvili equation}}
[[Category:Partial differential equations]]
[[Category:Exactly solvable models]]
[[Category:Solitons]]
[[Category:Equations of fluid dynamics]]

Latest revision as of 23:11, 8 December 2014

The author's name is Andera and she believes it sounds fairly good. My wife and I live in Mississippi but now I'm considering other options. He works as a bookkeeper. To climb is some thing I truly enjoy performing.

Review my homepage; online reader - www.machlitim.org.il,