Bäcklund transform

Bäcklund transform

In mathematics, Bäcklund transforms or Bäcklund transformations relate partial differential equations and their solutions. They are an important tool in soliton theory and integrable systems. A Bäcklund transform is typically a system of first order partial differential equations relating two functions, and often depending on an additional parameter. It implies that the two functions separately satisfy partial differential equations, and each of the two functions is then said to be a Bäcklund transformation of the other.

Bäcklund transforms have their origins in differential geometry: the first nontrivial example is the transformation of pseudospherical surfaces introduced by L. Bianchi and A.V. Bäcklund in the 1880s. This is a geometrical construction of a new pseudospherical surface from an initial such surface using a solution of a linear differential equation. Pseudospherical surfaces can be described as solutions of the sine-Gordon equation, and hence the Bäcklund transformation of surfaces can be viewed as a transformation of solutions of the sine-Gordon equation.

A Bäcklund transform which relates solutions of the "same" equation is called an invariant Bäcklund transform or auto-Bäcklund transform. If such a transform can be found, much can be deduced about the solutions of the equation especially if the Bäcklund transform contains a parameter. However, no systematic way of finding Bäcklund transforms is known.

The Cauchy-Riemann equations

The prototypical example of a Bäcklund transform is the Cauchy-Riemann system

:u_x=v_y, quad u_y=-v_x,,

which relates the real and imaginary parts "u" and "v" of a holomorphic function. This first order system of partial differential equations has the following properties.

# If "u" and "v" are solutions of the Cauchy-Riemann equations, then "u" is a solution of the Laplace equation (i.e., a harmonic function), and so is "v". This follows straightforwardly by differentiating the equations with respect to "x" and "y" and using the fact that
#:u_{xy}=u_{yx}, quad v_{xy}=v_{yx},.,
# Conversely if "u" is a solution of Laplace's equation, then there exist functions "v" which solve the Cauchy-Riemann equations together with "u".Thus, in this case, a Bäcklund transformation of a harmonic function is just a conjugate harmonic function. The above properties mean, more precisely, that Laplace's equation for "u" and Laplace's equation for "v" are the integrability conditions for solving the Cauchy-Riemann equations.

These are the characteristic features of a Bäcklund transform. If we have a partial differential equation in "u", and a Bäcklund transform from "u" to "v", we can deduce a partial differential equation satisfied by "v".

This example is rather trivial, because all three equations (the equation for "u", the equation for "v" and the Bäcklund transform relating them) are linear. Bäcklund transforms are most interesting when just one of the three equations is linear.

The sine-Gordon equation

Suppose that "u" is a solution of the sine-Gordon equation: u_{xy} = sin u.,

Then the system:egin{align}v_x & = u_x + 2a sin Bigl( frac{u+v}{2} Bigr) \v_y & = -u_y + frac{2}{a} sin Bigl( frac{u-v}{2} Bigr)end{align} ,!where "a" is an arbitrary parameter, is solvable for a function "v" which will also satisfy the sine-Gordon equation. This is an example of an auto-Bäcklund transform.

By using a matrix system, it is also possible to find a linear Bäcklund transform for solutions of sine-Gordon equation.

The Liouville equation

A Bäcklund transform can turn a non-linear partial differential equation into a simpler, linear, partial differential equation.

For example, if "u" and "v" are related via the Bäcklund transform

:egin{align}v_x & = u_x + 2a exp Bigl( frac{u+v}{2} Bigr) \v_y & = -u_y - frac{2}{a} exp Bigl( frac{u-v}{2} Bigr)end{align} ,!where "a" is an arbitrary parameter, and if "u" is a solution of the Liouville equation u_{xy}=exp u ,!

then "v" is a solution of the much simpler equation, v_{xy}=0, and vice versa.

We can then solve the (non-linear) Liouville equation by working with a much simpler linear equation.

References

* A. D. Polyanin and V. F. Zaitsev, "Handbook of Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations", Chapman & Hall/CRC Press, 2004.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Transformation de Bäcklund — Les transformations de Bäcklund (nommées ainsi en référence au mathématicien suédois Albert Victor Bäcklund) sont un outil mathématique relatif aux équations aux dérivées partielles et à leurs solutions. Elles sont importantes notamment dans l… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Albert Victor Bäcklund — (January 11, 1845 ndash; February 23, 1922) was a Swedish mathematician and physicist. He was a professor at Lund University and its rector from 1907 to 1909.Infobox Scientist name = Albert Victor Bäcklund box width = image width = 150px caption …   Wikipedia

  • List of transforms — This is a list of transforms in mathematics.Integral transforms*Abel transform *Fourier transform **Short time Fourier transform *Hankel transform *Hartley transform *Hilbert transform **Hilbert Schmidt integral operator *Laplace transform… …   Wikipedia

  • Partial differential equation — A visualisation of a solution to the heat equation on a two dimensional plane In mathematics, partial differential equations (PDE) are a type of differential equation, i.e., a relation involving an unknown function (or functions) of several… …   Wikipedia

  • List of mathematics articles (B) — NOTOC B B spline B* algebra B* search algorithm B,C,K,W system BA model Ba space Babuška Lax Milgram theorem Baby Monster group Baby step giant step Babylonian mathematics Babylonian numerals Bach tensor Bach s algorithm Bachmann–Howard ordinal… …   Wikipedia

  • Sine-Gordon equation — The sine Gordon equation is a nonlinear hyperbolic partial differential equation in 1+1 dimensions involving the d Alembert operator and the sine of the unknown function. It was originally considered in the nineteenth century in the course of… …   Wikipedia

  • Harmonic conjugate — For geometric conjugate points, see Projective harmonic conjugates. In mathematics, a function defined on some open domain is said to have as a conjugate a function if and only if they are respectively real and imaginary part of a holomorphic… …   Wikipedia

  • Ordinary differential equation — In mathematics, an ordinary differential equation (or ODE) is a relation that contains functions of only one independent variable, and one or more of their derivatives with respect to that variable. A simple example is Newton s second law of… …   Wikipedia

  • Lund University — Infobox University native name= Lunds universitet name= Lund University latin name= Universitas Lundensis or Universitas Gothorum Carolina. Also the older Academia Carolina lundensis, or Academia Carolina conciliatrix. motto= Ad utrumque (… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Lund University people — This is a list of notable people affiliated with Lund University, either as students or as researchers and academic teachers (or both). Lund University, located in the town of Lund in Skåne, Sweden, was founded in 1666.Nobel laureates affiliated… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”