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Parabolic partial differential equation

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A parabolic partial differential equation is a type of second-order partial differential equation (PDE) of the form

that satisfies the condition

This definition is analogous to the definition of a planar parabola.

This form of partial differential equation is used to describe a wide family of problems in science including heat diffusion, ocean acoustic propagation, physical or mathematical systems with a time variable, and processes that behave essentially like heat diffusing through a solid.

A simple example of a parabolic PDE is the one-dimensional heat equation,

where is the temperature at time and at position , and is a constant. The symbol signifies the partial derivative with respect to the time variable , and similarly is the second partial derivative with respect to . For this example, replaced the role of in the equation determining the type.

This equation says, roughly, that temperature at a given time and point rises or falls at a rate proportional to the difference between the temperature at that point and the average temperature near that point. The quantity measures how far off the temperature is from satisfying the mean value property of harmonic functions.

A generalization of the heat equation is

where is a second-order elliptic operator (implying must be positive also; a case where is non-positive is described below). Such a system can be hidden in an equation of the form

if the matrix-valued function has a kernel of dimension 1.

Solution

Under broad assumptions, parabolic PDEs as given above have solutions for all x,y and t>0. An equation of the form is considered parabolic if L is a (possibly nonlinear) function of u and its first and second derivatives, with some further conditions on L. With such a nonlinear parabolic differential equation, solutions exist for a short time—but may explode in a singularity in a finite amount of time. Hence, the difficulty is in determining solutions for all time, or more generally studying the singularities that arise. This is in general quite difficult, as in the solution of the Poincaré conjecture via Ricci flow.

Backward parabolic equation

One may occasionally wish to consider PDEs of the form where is a positive elliptic operator. While these problems are no longer necessarily well-posed (solutions may grow unbounded in finite time, or not even exist), they occur when studying the reflection of singularities of solutions to various other PDEs.[1]

This class of equations is closely related to standard hyperbolic equations, which can be seen easily by considering the so-called 'backwards heat equation':

This is essentially the same as the backward hyperbolic equation:

Examples

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Taylor, M. E. (1975), "Reflection of singularities of solutions to systems of differential equations", Comm. Pure Appl. Math., 28 (4): 457–478, doi:10.1002/cpa.3160280403

References