Difference Equations or Discrete Dynamical Systems is a diverse field which impacts almost every branch of pure and applied mathematics. Not surprisingly, the techniques that are developed vary just as broadly. No more so is this variety reflected than at the prestigious annual International Confere
Discrete Hamiltonian Systems: Difference Equations, Continued Fractions, and Riccati Equations
β Scribed by Calvin D. Ahlbrandt, Allan C. Peterson (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 384
- Series
- Kluwer Texts in the Mathematical Sciences 16
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book should be accessible to students who have had a first course in matrix theory. The existence and uniqueness theorem of Chapter 4 requires the implicit function theorem, but we give a self-contained constructive proof ofthat theorem. The reader willing to accept the implicit function theorem can read the book without an advanced calculus background. Chapter 8 uses the Moore-Penrose pseudo-inverse, but is accessible to students who have facility with matrices. Exercises are placed at those points in the text where they are relevant. For U. S. universities, we intend for the book to be used at the senior undergraduate level or beginning graduate level. Chapter 2, which is on continued fractions, is not essential to the material of the remaining chapters, but is intimately related to the remaining material. Continued fractions provide closed form representations of the extreme solutions of some discrete matrix Riccati equations. Continued fractions solution methods for Riccati difference equations provide an approach analogous to series solution methods for linear differential equations. The book develops several topics which have not been available at this level. In particular, the material of the chapters on continued fractions (Chapter 2), symplectic systems (Chapter 3), and discrete variational theory (Chapter 4) summarize recent literature. Similarly, the material on transforming Riccati equations presented in Chapter 3 gives a self-contained unification of various forms of Riccati equations. Motivation for our approach to difference equations came from the work of Harris, Vaughan, Hartman, Reid, Patula, Hooker, Erbe & Van, and Bohner.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiv
Second Order Scalar Difference Equations....Pages 1-44
Continued Fractions....Pages 45-69
Symplectic Systems....Pages 71-151
Discrete Variational Theory....Pages 153-197
Symmetric Three Term Recurrence Relations....Pages 199-262
Discrete Riccati Equations for Three Term Recurrences....Pages 263-294
Greenβs Functions for Nonhomogeneous Second Order Difference Equations....Pages 295-317
Disconjugacy Criteria....Pages 319-330
Discrete Linear Hamiltonian Systems....Pages 331-356
Back Matter....Pages 357-375
β¦ Subjects
Difference and Functional Equations; Calculus of Variations and Optimal Control; Optimization; Approximations and Expansions
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>These proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Difference Equations and Applications cover the areas of difference equations, discrete dynamical systems, fractal geometry, difference equations and biomedical models, and discrete models in the natural sciences, social sciences and engin
<span>This brief aims to merge the theories of fractional calculus and discrete calculus in a concise but comprehensive manner. It is designed for graduate students, but will be useful for any researcher interested in the theory of discrete fractional calculus and fractional difference equations.</s
This volume holds a collection of articles based on the talks presented at ICDEA 2007 in Lisbon, Portugal. The volume encompasses current topics on stability and bifurcation, chaos, mathematical biology, iteration theory, nonautonomous systems, and stochastic dynamical systems.
Dickey (mathematics, U. of Oklahoma) provides a detailed description of solitons, which have numerous applications in mechanics and physics. The new edition contains several additions and modifications including discussion of the Zakharov-Shabat matrix hierarchy with rational dependence on a spectra