Solitons
Until the beginning of this decade the number of significant exactly soluble problems in physics was limited to a very few: the classical or quanti sed harmonic oscillator, the linearised many-body problem, the quanti sed hydrogen atom, Newton's solution of the planetary orbit problem, Onsager's solution of the two-dimensional Ising problem, almost exhaust the list. Now the situation is quite different. We have a large number of exactly soluble nonlinear systems of physical significance and the number of these is growing steadily. Recent examples include a limited solution of Ein- stein's field equations!, an apparently exact solution of the quantised sine-Gordon 2 equation u - U = sin(u) which establishes connections with the Ising models, xx tt 3 and a solution of the equations of motion of a rigid body in g dimensions . This book is concerned with problems such as these. But more specifically it is concerned with solitons. These mathematical objects are exact, analytical, solutions of nonlinear wave or evolution equations like the sine-Gordon equation (s-G) or the Korteweg-de Vries equation (KdV) u ] 6uu + u = O. The discovery by Gardner, t x xxx .
1000911386
Solitons
Until the beginning of this decade the number of significant exactly soluble problems in physics was limited to a very few: the classical or quanti sed harmonic oscillator, the linearised many-body problem, the quanti sed hydrogen atom, Newton's solution of the planetary orbit problem, Onsager's solution of the two-dimensional Ising problem, almost exhaust the list. Now the situation is quite different. We have a large number of exactly soluble nonlinear systems of physical significance and the number of these is growing steadily. Recent examples include a limited solution of Ein- stein's field equations!, an apparently exact solution of the quantised sine-Gordon 2 equation u - U = sin(u) which establishes connections with the Ising models, xx tt 3 and a solution of the equations of motion of a rigid body in g dimensions . This book is concerned with problems such as these. But more specifically it is concerned with solitons. These mathematical objects are exact, analytical, solutions of nonlinear wave or evolution equations like the sine-Gordon equation (s-G) or the Korteweg-de Vries equation (KdV) u ] 6uu + u = O. The discovery by Gardner, t x xxx .
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Solitons

Solitons

Solitons

Solitons

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1980)

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Overview

Until the beginning of this decade the number of significant exactly soluble problems in physics was limited to a very few: the classical or quanti sed harmonic oscillator, the linearised many-body problem, the quanti sed hydrogen atom, Newton's solution of the planetary orbit problem, Onsager's solution of the two-dimensional Ising problem, almost exhaust the list. Now the situation is quite different. We have a large number of exactly soluble nonlinear systems of physical significance and the number of these is growing steadily. Recent examples include a limited solution of Ein- stein's field equations!, an apparently exact solution of the quantised sine-Gordon 2 equation u - U = sin(u) which establishes connections with the Ising models, xx tt 3 and a solution of the equations of motion of a rigid body in g dimensions . This book is concerned with problems such as these. But more specifically it is concerned with solitons. These mathematical objects are exact, analytical, solutions of nonlinear wave or evolution equations like the sine-Gordon equation (s-G) or the Korteweg-de Vries equation (KdV) u ] 6uu + u = O. The discovery by Gardner, t x xxx .

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783642814501
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publication date: 12/15/2011
Series: Topics in Current Physics , #17
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1980
Pages: 392
Product dimensions: 6.69(w) x 9.61(h) x 0.03(d)

Table of Contents

1 The Soliton and Its History.- 1.1 Russell’s Discovery of the ‘Great Solitary Wave’.- 1.2 Definition of a Soliton: N-Soliton Solutions of Nonlinear Evolution Equations.- 1.3 Bäcklund Transformations and Conserved Densities.- 1.4 Other Physical Problems and the Discovery of the Inverse Method.- 1.5 Operator Pair Formulation of Nonlinear Evolution Equations.- 1.6 Discovery of Some Other N-Soliton Solutions: The AKNS-Zakharov-Shabat 2 × 2 Scattering Scheme and Its Geometry.- 1.7 Further Progress on Inverse Scattering Methods.- References.- 2. Aspects of Soliton Physics.- 2.1 Historical Remarks and Summary.- 2.2 Model Interacting Systems.- 2.3 Inverse Spectral Transformation and Motion Invariants.- Appendix A: Formal Derivation of the Marchenko Equations.- References.- 3. The Double Sine—Gordon Equations: A Physically Applicable System of Equations.- 3.1 Physical Background.- 3.2 Theory of Degenerate SIT.- 3.3 Spin Waves in Liquid 3He.- 3.4 Perturbation Theory for the Double Sine-Gordon Equation.- References.- 4. On a Nonlinear Lattice (The Toda Lattice).- 4.1 Nonlinear Lattices.- 4.2 The Exponential Interaction.- 4.3 Matrix Formalism.- 4.4 The Continuum Limit.- 4.5 Bäcklund Transformations.- 4.6 Concluding Remarks.- References.- 5. Direct Methods in Soliton Theory.- 5.1 Preliminaries.- 5.2 Properties of the D Operator.- 5.3 Solutions of the Bilinear Differential Equations.- 5.4 N-Soliton Solution of KdV-Type Equations.- 5.5 Bäcklund Transformations in Bilinear Form.- References.- 6. The Inverse Scattering Transform.- 6.1 General Discussion.- 6.2 The Generalized Zakharov-Shabat Eigenvalue Problem.- 6.3 Evolution of the Scattering Data.- 6.4 The Squared Eigenfunctions and Fourier Expansions.- 6.5 Evolution Equations of Class I.- 6.6 Hamiltonian Structure of theEquations of Class I.- 6.7 Systems with Two Dispersion Relations.- 6.8 Coherent Pulse Propagation.- 6.9 Moving Eigenvalues.- 6.10 The Sine-Gordon Equation.- 6.11 Schrödinger Equation.- 6.12 A Singular Perturbation Theory.- 6.13 Conclusion.- References.- 7. The Inverse Scattering Method.- 7.1 Preliminary Remarks.- 7.2 The Method of Finding “L-A” Pairs.- 7.3 Elementary Multidimensional Generalisation.- 7.4 Dressing “ $$ \hat L - \hat A $$” Pairs.- 7.5 The Problem of Reduction and the Physical Interpretation of Examples.- 7.6 Two Dimensional Instability of Solitons.- 7.7 Exact Solutions of Equations in Nonlinear Optics.- 7.8 “ $$ \hat L,\hat A,\hat B $$” Triad.- 7.9 The Conservation of the Spectrum of Operator Families.- 7.10 The “Dressing” of Operator Families.- References.- 8. Generalized Matrix Form of the Inverse Scattering Method.- 8.1 Historical Remarks.- 8.2 The Inverse Scattering Problem.- 8.3 The Inverse Scattering Method and Solvable Equations.- 8.4 Extension to Lattice Problems.- 8.5 Concluding Remarks.- References.- 9. Nonlinear Evolution Equations Solvable by the Inverse Spectral Transform Associated with the Matrix Schrödinger Equation.- 9.1 Direct and Inverse Matrix Schrödinger Problem; Notation.- 9.2 Generalized Wronskian Relations; Basic Formulae.- 9.3 Nonlinear Evolution Equations Solvable by the Inverse Spectral Transform; Solitons.- 9.4 The Boomeron Equation and Other Solvable Nonlinear Evolution Equations Related to it; Boomerons.- 9.5 Bäcklund Transformations.- 9.6 Nonlinear Superposition Principle.- 9.7 Conserved Quantities.- 9.8 Generalized Resolvent Formula.- 9.9 Nonlinear Operator Identities.- References.- 10. A Method of Solving the Periodic Problem for the KdV Equation and Its Generalizations.- 10.1 One-Dimensional SystemsAdmitting a Lax Representation; Their Stationary Solutions.- 10.2 Finite-Zoned Linear Operators.- 10.3 Hamiltonian Formalism for KdV in Stationary and Nonstationary Problems.- 10.4 The Akhiezer Function and Its Applications.- References.- 11. A Hamiltonian Interpretation of the Inverse Scattering Method.- 11.1 The Hamiltonian Formulation.- 11.2 Complete Integrability of the Nonlinear Schrödinger Equation.- 11.3 Applications to the Quantization Problem.- References.- 12. Quantum Solitons in Statistical Physics.- 12.1 Preliminary Remarks.- 12.2 Quantization and Quantum Solitons.- 12.3 Continuum Field Equations.- 12.4 Eigenvalue Spectrum.- References.- Further Remarks on John Scott Russel and on the Early History of His Solitary Wave.- Note Added in Proof (Chapter 1).- Additional References with Titles.
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