Questions tagged [partial-differential-equations]

Questions on partial (as opposed to ordinary) differential equations - equations involving partial derivatives of one or more dependent variables with respect to more than one independent variables.

Partial differential equations (PDEs) contain partial derivatives and usually contain two or more variables; the single-variable cases with normal derivatives are ordinary differential equations.

In general partial differential equation can be written in the form $$f(x, y, ,\dots , u, u_x, u_y, \dots , u_{xx}, u_{xy}, \dots )=0$$involving several independent variables $x, y, \dots ,$ an unknown function $u$ of these variables, and the partial derivatives $u_x, u_y, \dots, u_{xx}, u_{xy}, \dots$, of the function.

Subscripts on dependent variables denote differentiations, e.g., $$u_x\equiv \frac{\partial u}{\partial x},\quad u_{xy}\equiv \frac{\partial^2 u}{\partial x \partial y },$$and so on. The $f$ denotes a function defined on a subset of a finite dimensional space. Functional operators on functions like $f(u):=\frac{du}{dx}$ are not allowed in this definition. For instance, Laplace's equation in three dimensions $u_{xx} + u_{yy} + u_{zz} = 0$ is defined by $f(x,y,z,\nabla u,\nabla^2 u) = 0$, where $$f(a,b,c,v,M) := M_{11} + M_{22} + M_{33}.$$

Questions with this tag may be about, among other things:

  1. Analysis of existence and uniqueness of classical/strong/weak/viscous/etc. solutions in boundary value problems/Cauchy problems/Riemann problems.
  2. Functional analysis related to PDEs, e.g., theories of Sobolev spaces, Bochner spaces, analysis of linear/nonlinear differential operators, and pseudodifferential operators, etc.
  3. The stability, or long-term behavior of the solution.
  4. Different methods of solving PDEs, separation of variables, Fourier transform, solitons, method of characteristics.
  5. The solution technique of the Euler-Lagrange equations from calculus of variations.
  6. Equation-relevant theory in other fields, e.g. Hyperbolic conservation laws in fluid/gas dynamics, Maxwell's equations in electromagnetism, Hamilton-Jacobi equation in control theory, etc.

Please consider using more specific tags if your question addresses some of the aspects in that field, e.g., , , , , , , , .

References:

"Partial Differential Equations" by L. C. Evans

" Linear Partial. Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers" by Tyn Myint-U & Lokenath Debnath

"Differential Equations" by Shepley L. Ross

See also the Wikipedia and MathWorld entries.

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Mathematical precise definition of a PDE being elliptic, parabolic or hyperbolic

what is the general definition for some partial differential equation being called elliptic, parabolic or hyperbolic - in particular, if the PDE is nonlinear and above second-order. So far, I have not found any precise definition in literature.
shuhalo
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Why separation of variables works in PDEs?

The method of separation of variables is used in many occasions in the upper level physics courses such as QM and EM. But when it is used there is no clear reason why using it is permitted it except that it works, or that let us try and see. Is…
Revo
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What kinds of PDE can't be solved by separation of variables?

What kinds of PDE can't be solved by separation of variables? Except those without boundary and which are non-linear? Does it matters with the shape of solution domain? When should I use addition or division (not multiplication) to separate…
Colin FU
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Non-linear partial differential equation

I would like to find out if there is any specific method -apart from numerics- for finding solutions of a non-linear PDE of the form $$\nabla \times \mathbf{A} = \pm\lambda\mathbf{A} \tag{1}$$ under the constraint $$\nabla\lambda \times \mathbf{A} =…
rtheo
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difference between linear, semilinear and quasilinear PDE's

I know a PDE is linear when the dependent variable $u$ and its derivatives appear only to the first power. So, $u_t + u_x +5u = 1$ would be linear. However, I do not quite understand the other two. My professor described "semilinear" PDE's as…
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Characteristics in the theory of PDE's - What's Going On?

What's really going on as regards characterstics in the theory of PDE's? (Hopefully you wont have to check the links provided below, included for those who are interested really) For second order PDE's, in this video in which characteristics were…
bolbteppa
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Intuitive explanation of Duhamel's principle

This is with regards to the first section of Wikipedia article Duhamel's principle (revision from July 2012). I want to see if I am understanding this. Basically the inhomogeneous equation says that heat is being added at a rate of $f(x,t)$, so at…
JLA
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What is the purpose of computing the eigenvalue of a PDE problem?

I understand that eigenvalues have their purpose in linear algebra (e.g. iterative methods won't converge unless the modulus of the spectral radius is less than or equal to one). But when I solve partial differential equations using a finite…
Paul
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Difference between the fundamental solution and the Green function

A lot of sources (books, internet courses, articles etc.) deal with just one of the two: Green function, and the fundamental solution. I wasn't able to find a distinction, but I suppose there is one. However both seem to be defined for a…
Lurco
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Problem 7 - Chapter 6 - Evans' PDE (Second Edition)

Problem 7 in §6.6 states as follows: Let $u\in H^1(\mathbb{R}^n)$ have compact support and be a weak solution of the semilinear PDE $$-\Delta u+c(u)=f\,\,\text{ in } \mathbb{R}^n,$$ where $f\in L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$ and $c:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$…
Y.Z
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Weak solutions to the Neumann's problem (Evans PDE)

Let $U$ be connected. A function $u \in H^1(U)$ is a weak solution of Neumann's problem \begin{equation} (*)\qquad\left\{ \begin{array}{rl} -\Delta = f & \text{in } U \\ \frac{\partial u}{\partial \nu} = 0 & \text{on } \partial…
Tom
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How to define weak solution for an elliptic PDE with non-zero Dirichlet boundary condition?

For homogeneous Dirichlet boundary condition, for example $$ \left\{\!\! \begin{aligned} &-\Delta u+c(x)u=f(x),x\in\Omega\\ &u|_{\partial\Omega}=0 \end{aligned} \right. $$ The weak solution is defined as a function $u\in H_0^1(\Omega)$…
Roun
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when does a separate-variable series solution exist for a PDE

I am wondering if there are some conclusions as to when a series solution using the separate variable method to a PDE exists; i.e. for what requirements on the PDE, what requirements on the initial and boundary conditions so that one can assume the…
Qiang Li
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intuition behind weak solution

I want to understand what weak solution actually means. This is a solution which is not as "smooth" and satisfies bi-linear formulation. So, what I am trying to understand is whether it satisfies the original equation at all or how it related to it.…
Medan
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Quasilinear PDE definition?

Quasilinear PDE definition? Here it's written that: Definition 3: A partial differential equation is said to be quasilinear if it is linear with respect to all the highest order derivatives of the unknown function. What does mean to be linear…
mavavilj
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