During the last twenty years, the theory of analyticity in infinite dimensions has developed from its foundations into a structure which may be termed harmonious, provided that one accepts to do without some features of the finite dimensional case. This harmony is of course favoured by the cho
Semidynamical Systems in Infinite Dimensional Spaces
β Scribed by Stephen H. Saperstone (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 486
- Series
- Applied Mathematical Sciences 37
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Where do solutions go, and how do they behave en route? These are two of the major questions addressed by the qualitaΒ tive theory of differential equations. The purpose of this book is to answer these questions for certain classes of equaΒ tions by recourse to the framework of semidynamical systems (or topological dynamics as it is sometimes called). This approach makes it possible to treat a seemingly broad range of equations from nonautonomous ordinary differential equaΒ tions and partial differential equations to stochastic differΒ ential equations. The methods are not limited to the examples presented here, though. The basic idea is this: Embed some representation of the solutions of the equation (and perhaps the equation itself) in an appropriate function space. This space serves as the phase space for the semidynamical system. The phase map must be chosen so as to generate solutions to the equation from an initial value. In most instances it is necessary to provide a "weak" topology on the phase space. Typically the space is infinite dimensional. These considerations motivate the requirement to study semidynamical systems in non locally compact spaces. Our objective here is to present only those results needed for the kinds of applications one is likely to encounter in differenΒ tial equations. Additional properties and extensions of abΒ stract semidynamical systems are left as exercises. The power of the semidynamical framework makes it possible to character- Preface ize the asymptotic behavior of the solutions of such a wide class of equations.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages N1-xiii
Basic Definitions and Properties....Pages 1-34
Invariance, Limit Sets, and Stability....Pages 35-97
Motions in Metric Space....Pages 98-136
Nonautonomous Ordinary Differential Equations....Pages 137-208
Semidynamical Systems in Banach Space....Pages 209-282
Functional Differential Equations....Pages 283-368
Stochastic Dynamical Systems....Pages 369-392
Weak Semidynamical Systems and Processes....Pages 393-423
Back Matter....Pages 424-475
β¦ Subjects
Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>"Many excellent books in this field have been published. But this is the first book that describes systematically the former, although this object is very important and very interesting. And in the latter also this book contains a number of results which are not touched on in other books. Therefo
<p><p>This book provides a self-contained introduction to the theory of infinite-dimensional systems theory and its applications to port-Hamiltonian systems. The textbook starts with elementary known results, then progresses smoothly to advanced topics in current research.</p><p>Many physical system
<p><p>This book provides a self-contained introduction to the theory of infinite-dimensional systems theory and its applications to port-Hamiltonian systems. The textbook starts with elementary known results, then progresses smoothly to advanced topics in current research.</p><p>Many physical system
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