|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
To our wives, Masha and Marian Interest in the so-called completely
integrable systems with infinite num ber of degrees of freedom was
aroused immediately after publication of the famous series of
papers by Gardner, Greene, Kruskal, Miura, and Zabusky [75, 77, 96,
18, 66, 19J (see also [76]) on striking properties of the
Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) equation. It soon became clear that systems
of such a kind possess a number of characteristic properties, such
as infinite series of symmetries and/or conservation laws, inverse
scattering problem formulation, L - A pair representation,
existence of prolongation structures, etc. And though no
satisfactory definition of complete integrability was yet invented,
a need of testing a particular system for these properties
appeared. Probably one of the most efficient tests of this kind was
first proposed by Lenard [19]' who constructed a recursion operator
for symmetries of the KdV equation. It was a strange operator, in a
sense: being formally integro-differential, its action on the first
classical symmetry (x-translation) was well-defined and produced
the entire series of higher KdV equations; but applied to the
scaling symmetry, it gave expressions containing terms of the type
J u dx which had no adequate interpretation in the framework of the
existing theories. It is not surprising that P. Olver wrote "The de
duction of the form of the recursion operator (if it exists)
requires a certain amount of inspired guesswork. . . " [80, p.
The geometrical theory of nonlinear differential equations
originates from classical works by S. Lie and A. Backlund. It
obtained a new impulse in the sixties when the complete
integrability of the Korteweg-de Vries equation was found and it
became clear that some basic and quite general geometrical and
algebraic structures govern this property of integrability.
Nowadays the geometrical and algebraic approach to partial
differential equations constitutes a special branch of modern
mathematics. In 1993, a workshop on algebra and geometry of
differential equations took place at the University of Twente (The
Netherlands), where the state-of-the-art of the main problems was
fixed. This book contains a collection of invited lectures
presented at this workshop. The material presented is of interest
to those who work in pure and applied mathematics and especially in
mathematical physics."
To our wives, Masha and Marian Interest in the so-called completely
integrable systems with infinite num ber of degrees of freedom was
aroused immediately after publication of the famous series of
papers by Gardner, Greene, Kruskal, Miura, and Zabusky [75, 77, 96,
18, 66, 19J (see also [76]) on striking properties of the
Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) equation. It soon became clear that systems
of such a kind possess a number of characteristic properties, such
as infinite series of symmetries and/or conservation laws, inverse
scattering problem formulation, L - A pair representation,
existence of prolongation structures, etc. And though no
satisfactory definition of complete integrability was yet invented,
a need of testing a particular system for these properties
appeared. Probably one of the most efficient tests of this kind was
first proposed by Lenard [19]' who constructed a recursion operator
for symmetries of the KdV equation. It was a strange operator, in a
sense: being formally integro-differential, its action on the first
classical symmetry (x-translation) was well-defined and produced
the entire series of higher KdV equations; but applied to the
scaling symmetry, it gave expressions containing terms of the type
J u dx which had no adequate interpretation in the framework of the
existing theories. It is not surprising that P. Olver wrote "The de
duction of the form of the recursion operator (if it exists)
requires a certain amount of inspired guesswork. . . " [80, p.
The geometrical theory of nonlinear differential equations
originates from classical works by S. Lie and A. BC$cklund. It
obtained a new impulse in the sixties when the complete
integrability of the Korteweg-de Vries equation was found and it
became clear that some basic and quite general geometrical and
algebraic structures govern this property of integrability.
Nowadays the geometrical and algebraic approach to partial
differential equations constitutes a special branch of modern
mathematics. In 1993, a workshop on algebra and geometry of
differential equations took place at the University of Twente (The
Netherlands), where the state-of-the-art of the main problems was
fixed. This book contains a collection of invited lectures
presented at this workshop. The material presented is of interest
to those who work in pure and applied mathematics and especially in
mathematical physics.
|
You may like...
Catan
(16)
R1,150
R887
Discovery Miles 8 870
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R482
Discovery Miles 4 820
|