This is a continuation of the subject matter discussed in the first book, with an emphasis on systems of ordinary differential equations and will be most appropriate for upper level undergraduate and graduate students in the fields of mathematics, engineering, and applied mathematics, as well as in
Differential Equations: A Dynamical Systems Approach: Higher-Dimensional Systems
β Scribed by John H. Hubbard, Beverly H. West (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 611
- Series
- Texts in Applied Mathematics 18
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Mathematics is playing an ever more important role in the physical and biological sciences, provoking a blurring of boundaries between scientific disciplines and a resurgence of interest in the modern as well as the clasΒ sical techniques of applied mathematics. This renewal of interest, both in research and teaching, had led to the establishment of the series: Texts in Applied Mathematics (TAM). The development of new courses is a natural consequence of a high level of excitement on the research frontier as newer techniques, such as numerical and symbolic computer systems, dynamical systems, and chaos, mix with and reinforce the traditional methods of applied mathematics. Thus, the purpose of this textbook series is to meet the current and future needs of these advances and encourage the teaching of new courses. TAM will publish textbooks suitable for use in advanced undergraduate and beginning graduate courses, and will complement the Applied MathΒ ematical Sciences (AMS) series, which will focus on advanced textbooks and research level monographs. Preface As in Part I, this book concentrates on understanding the behavior of difΒ ferential equations, rather than on solving the equations. Part I focused on differential equations in one dimension; this volume attempts to understand differential equations in n dimensions. The existence and uniqueness theory carries over with almost no changes.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiv
Systems of Differential Equations....Pages 1-68
Systems of Differential Equations....Pages 69-129
Systems of Nonlinear Differential Equations....Pages 131-201
Structural Stability....Pages 203-264
Bifurcations....Pages 265-368
Back Matter....Pages 369-602
β¦ Subjects
Analysis;Mathematical Methods in Physics;Numerical and Computational Physics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>Mathematics is playing an ever more important role in the physical and biological sciences, provoking a blurring of boundaries between scientific disciplines and a resurgence of interest in the modern as well as the clasΒ sical techniques of applied mathematics. This renewal of interest, both in
This graduate-level introduction to ordinary differential equations combines both qualitative and numerical analysis of solutions, in line with PoincarΓ©'s vision for the field over a century ago. Taking into account the remarkable development of dynamical systems since then, the authors present the
<p>common feature is that these evolution problems can be formulated as asymptotiΒ cally small perturbations of certain dynamical systems with better-known behaviour. Now, it usually happens that the perturbation is small in a very weak sense, hence the difficulty (or impossibility) of applying more