Introduction What are Partial Differential Equations? PDEs We Can Already Solve Initial and Boundary Conditions Linear PDEs-Definitions Linear PDEs-The Principle of Superposition Separation of Variables for Linear, Homogeneous PDEs Eigenvalue Problems The Big Three PDEsSecond-Order, Linear, Homogene
Introduction to Partial Differential Equations with MATLAB
β Scribed by Jeffery Cooper (auth.)
- Publisher
- BirkhΓ€user Basel
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 549
- Series
- Applied and Numerical Harmonic Analysis
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Overview The subject of partial differential equations has an unchanging core of material but is constantly expanding and evolving. The core consists of solution methods, mainly separation of variables, for boundary value problems with constant coeffiΒ cients in geometrically simple domains. Too often an introductory course focuses exclusively on these core problems and techniques and leaves the student with the impression that there is no more to the subject. Questions of existence, uniqueness, and well-posedness are ignored. In particular there is a lack of connection between the analytical side of the subject and the numerical side. Furthermore nonlinear problems are omitted because they are too hard to deal with analytically. Now, however, the availability of convenient, powerful computational software has made it possible to enlarge the scope of the introductory course. My goal in this text is to give the student a broader picture of the subject. In addition to the basic core subjects, I have included material on nonlinear problems and brief discussions of numerical methods. I feel that it is important for the student to see nonlinear problems and numerical methods at the beginning of the course, and not at the end when we run usually run out of time. Furthermore, numerical methods should be introduced for each equation as it is studied, not lumped together in a final chapter.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Preliminaries....Pages 1-18
First-Order Equations....Pages 19-72
Diffusion....Pages 73-110
Boundary Value Problems for the Heat Equation....Pages 111-155
Waves Again....Pages 157-218
Fourier Series and Fourier Transform....Pages 219-258
Dispersive Waves and the SchrΓΆdinger Equation....Pages 259-296
The Heat and Wave Equations in Higher Dimensions....Pages 297-366
Equilibrium....Pages 367-423
Numerical Methods for Higher Dimensions....Pages 425-453
Epilogue: Classification....Pages 455-458
Back Matter....Pages 459-541
β¦ Subjects
Partial Differential Equations; Computational Mathematics and Numerical Analysis
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This introductory text explores the essentials of partial differential equations applied to common problems in engineering and the physical sciences. It reviews calculus and ordinary differential equations, explores integral curves and surfaces of vector fields, the Cauchy-Kovalevsky theory and more
This introductory text explores the essentials of partial differential equations applied to common problems in engineering and the physical sciences. It reviews calculus and ordinary differential equations, explores integral curves and surfaces of vector fields, the Cauchy-Kovalevsky theory and more
discusses [functional (in)dependence](https://math.stackexchange.com/q/2601299/128568) (cf. [Olver](https://isidore.co/calibre#book_id=6119&panel=book_details) pp. 86ff. // PDF pp. 111ff.) * * * This book has been widely acclaimed for its clear, cogent presentation of the theory of partial different