Particles or aggregates of particles trapped at fluid interfaces are subjected to capillary forces. This paper is devoted to a force analysis of the capillary interaction between two horizontal cylinders lying side by side on an interface. First, we derive exact expressions for the force of interact
Correlation between pole location and asymptotic behavior for Painlevé I solutions
✍ Scribed by Ovidiu Costin
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 407 KB
- Volume
- 52
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0010-3640
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
We extend the technique of asymptotic series matching to exponential asymptotics expansions (transseries) and show by using asymptotic information that the extension provides a method of finding singularities of solutions of nonlinear differential equations. This transasymptotic matching method is applied to Painlevé's first equation, P1. The solutions of P1 that are bounded in some direction towards infinity can be expressed as series of functions obtained by generalized Borel summation of formal transseries solutions; the series converge in a neighborhood of infinity. We prove (under certain restrictions) that the boundary of the region of convergence contains actual poles of the associated solution. As a consequence, the position of these exterior poles is derived from asymptotic data. In particular, we prove that the location of the outermost pole xp(C) on R + of a solution is monotonic in a parameter C describing its asymptotics on anti-Stokes lines 1 and obtain rigorous bounds for xp(C). We also derive the behavior of xp(C) for large C ∈ C. The appendix gives a detailed classical proof that the only singularities of solutions of P1 are poles.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES