|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
The authors give a systematic introduction to boundary value
problems (BVPs) for ordinary differential equations. The book is a
graduate level text and good to use for individual study. With the
relaxed style of writing, the reader will find it to be an enticing
invitation to join this important area of mathematical research.
Starting with the basics of boundary value problems for ordinary
differential equations, linear equations and the construction of
Green's functions are presented clearly.A discussion of the
important question of the existence of solutions to both linear and
nonlinear problems plays a central role in this volume and this
includes solution matching and the comparison of eigenvalues.The
important and very active research area on existence and
multiplicity of positive solutions is treated in detail. The last
chapter is devoted to nodal solutions for BVPs with separated
boundary conditions as well as for non-local problems.While this
Volume II complements , it can be used as a stand-alone work.
The authors give a treatment of the theory of ordinary differential
equations (ODEs) that is excellent for a first course at the
graduate level as well as for individual study. The reader will
find it to be a captivating introduction with a number of
non-routine exercises dispersed throughout the book.The authors
begin with a study of initial value problems for systems of
differential equations including the Picard and Peano existence
theorems. The continuability of solutions, their continuous
dependence on initial conditions, and their continuous dependence
with respect to parameters are presented in detail. This is
followed by a discussion of the differentiability of solutions with
respect to initial conditions and with respect to parameters.
Comparison results and differential inequalities are included as
well.Linear systems of differential equations are treated in detail
as is appropriate for a study of ODEs at this level. Just the right
amount of basic properties of matrices are introduced to facilitate
the observation of matrix systems and especially those with
constant coefficients. Floquet theory for linear periodic systems
is presented and used to analyze nonhomogeneous linear
systems.Stability theory of first order and vector linear systems
are considered. The relationships between stability of solutions,
uniform stability, asymptotic stability, uniformly asymptotic
stability, and strong stability are examined and illustrated with
examples as is the stability of vector linear systems. The book
concludes with a chapter on perturbed systems of ODEs.
This book is devoted to the study of existence of solutions or
positive solutions for various classes of Riemann-Liouville and
Caputo fractional differential equations, and systems of fractional
differential equations subject to nonlocal boundary conditions. The
monograph draws together many of the authors' results, that have
been obtained and highly cited in the literature in the last four
years.In each chapter, various examples are presented which support
the main results. The methods used in the proof of these theorems
include results from the fixed point theory and fixed point index
theory. This volume can serve as a good resource for mathematical
and scientific researchers, and for graduate students in
mathematics and science interested in the existence of solutions
for fractional differential equations and systems.
The authors give a systematic introduction to boundary value
problems (BVPs) for ordinary differential equations. The book is a
graduate level text and good to use for individual study. With the
relaxed style of writing, the reader will find it to be an enticing
invitation to join this important area of mathematical research.
Starting with the basics of boundary value problems for ordinary
differential equations, linear equations and the construction of
Green's functions are presented clearly.A discussion of the
important question of the existence of solutions to both linear and
nonlinear problems plays a central role in this volume and this
includes solution matching and the comparison of eigenvalues.The
important and very active research area on existence and
multiplicity of positive solutions is treated in detail. The last
chapter is devoted to nodal solutions for BVPs with separated
boundary conditions as well as for non-local problems.While this
Volume II complements , it can be used as a stand-alone work.
The authors give a treatment of the theory of ordinary differential
equations (ODEs) that is excellent for a first course at the
graduate level as well as for individual study. The reader will
find it to be a captivating introduction with a number of
non-routine exercises dispersed throughout the book.The authors
begin with a study of initial value problems for systems of
differential equations including the Picard and Peano existence
theorems. The continuability of solutions, their continuous
dependence on initial conditions, and their continuous dependence
with respect to parameters are presented in detail. This is
followed by a discussion of the differentiability of solutions with
respect to initial conditions and with respect to parameters.
Comparison results and differential inequalities are included as
well.Linear systems of differential equations are treated in detail
as is appropriate for a study of ODEs at this level. Just the right
amount of basic properties of matrices are introduced to facilitate
the observation of matrix systems and especially those with
constant coefficients. Floquet theory for linear periodic systems
is presented and used to analyze nonhomogeneous linear
systems.Stability theory of first order and vector linear systems
are considered. The relationships between stability of solutions,
uniform stability, asymptotic stability, uniformly asymptotic
stability, and strong stability are examined and illustrated with
examples as is the stability of vector linear systems. The book
concludes with a chapter on perturbed systems of ODEs.
This book is devoted to the study of boundary value problems for
nonlinear ordinary differential equations and focuses on questions
related to the study of nonlinear interpolation. In 1967, Andrzej
Lasota and Zdzislaw Opial showed that, under suitable hypotheses,
if solutions of a second-order nonlinear differential equation
passing through two distinct points are unique, when they exist,
then, in fact, a solution passing through two distinct points does
exist. That result, coupled with the pioneering work of Philip
Hartman on what was then called unrestricted n-parameter families,
has stimulated 50 years of development in the study of solutions of
boundary value problems as nonlinear interpolation problems.The
purpose of this book is two-fold. First, the results that have been
generated in the past 50 years are collected for the first time to
produce a comprehensive and coherent treatment of what is now a
well-defined area of study in the qualitative theory of ordinary
differential equations. Second, methods and technical tools are
sufficiently exposed so that the interested reader can contribute
to the study of nonlinear interpolation.
|
|