Questions tagged [partial-differential-equations]

Questions on partial (as opposed to ordinary) differential equations - equations involving partial derivatives of one or more dependent variables with respect to more than one independent variables.

Partial differential equations (PDEs) contain partial derivatives and usually contain two or more variables; the single-variable cases with normal derivatives are ordinary differential equations.

In general partial differential equation can be written in the form $$f(x, y, ,\dots , u, u_x, u_y, \dots , u_{xx}, u_{xy}, \dots )=0$$involving several independent variables $x, y, \dots ,$ an unknown function $u$ of these variables, and the partial derivatives $u_x, u_y, \dots, u_{xx}, u_{xy}, \dots$, of the function.

Subscripts on dependent variables denote differentiations, e.g., $$u_x\equiv \frac{\partial u}{\partial x},\quad u_{xy}\equiv \frac{\partial^2 u}{\partial x \partial y },$$and so on. The $f$ denotes a function defined on a subset of a finite dimensional space. Functional operators on functions like $f(u):=\frac{du}{dx}$ are not allowed in this definition. For instance, Laplace's equation in three dimensions $u_{xx} + u_{yy} + u_{zz} = 0$ is defined by $f(x,y,z,\nabla u,\nabla^2 u) = 0$, where $$f(a,b,c,v,M) := M_{11} + M_{22} + M_{33}.$$

Questions with this tag may be about, among other things:

  1. Analysis of existence and uniqueness of classical/strong/weak/viscous/etc. solutions in boundary value problems/Cauchy problems/Riemann problems.
  2. Functional analysis related to PDEs, e.g., theories of Sobolev spaces, Bochner spaces, analysis of linear/nonlinear differential operators, and pseudodifferential operators, etc.
  3. The stability, or long-term behavior of the solution.
  4. Different methods of solving PDEs, separation of variables, Fourier transform, solitons, method of characteristics.
  5. The solution technique of the Euler-Lagrange equations from calculus of variations.
  6. Equation-relevant theory in other fields, e.g. Hyperbolic conservation laws in fluid/gas dynamics, Maxwell's equations in electromagnetism, Hamilton-Jacobi equation in control theory, etc.

Please consider using more specific tags if your question addresses some of the aspects in that field, e.g., , , , , , , , .

References:

"Partial Differential Equations" by L. C. Evans

" Linear Partial. Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers" by Tyn Myint-U & Lokenath Debnath

"Differential Equations" by Shepley L. Ross

See also the Wikipedia and MathWorld entries.

24251 questions
224
votes
5 answers

What do modern-day analysts actually do?

In an abstract algebra class, one learns about groups, rings, and fields, and (perhaps naively) conceives of a modern-day algebraist as someone who studies these sorts of structures. One learns about the classification of finite simple groups, and…
130
votes
0 answers

On the Constant Rank Theorem and the Frobenius Theorem for differential equations.

Recently I was reading chapter $4$ (p. $60$) of The Implicit Function Theorem: History, Theorem, and Applications (By Steven George Krantz, Harold R. Parks) on proof's of the equivalence of the Implicit Function Theorem (finite-dimensional vector…
121
votes
1 answer

Lebesgue measure theory vs differential forms?

I am currently reading various differential geometry books. From what I understand differential forms allow us to generalize calculus to manifolds and thus perform integration on manifolds. I gather that it is, in general, completely distinct from…
121
votes
10 answers

Good 1st PDE book for self study

What is a good PDE book suitable for self study? I'm looking for a book that doesn't require much prerequisite knowledge beyond undergraduate-level analysis. My goal is to understand basic solutions techniques as well as some basic theory.
119
votes
9 answers

Why should I "believe in" weak solutions to PDEs?

This is a sort of soft-question to which I can't find any satisfactory answer. At heart, I feel I have some need for a robust and well-motivated formalism in mathematics, and my work in geometry requires me to learn some analysis, and so I am…
106
votes
8 answers

Has Prof. Otelbaev shown existence of strong solutions for Navier-Stokes equations?

Moderator Notice: I am unilaterally closing this question for three reasons. The discussion here has turned too chatty and not suitable for the MSE framework. Given the recent pre-print of T. Tao (see also the blog-post here), the continued…
electronp
  • 151
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
106
votes
2 answers

What is the solution to Nash's problem presented in "A Beautiful Mind"?

I was watching the said movie the other night, and I started thinking about the equation posed by Nash in the movie. More specifically, the one he said would take some students a lifetime to solve (obviously, an exaggeration). Nonetheless, one…
101
votes
0 answers

Why is a PDE a submanifold (and not just a subset)?

I struggle a bit with understanding the idea behind the definition of a PDE on a fibred manifold. Let $\pi: E \to M$ be a smooth locally trivial fibre bundle. In Gromovs words a partial differential relation of order $k$ is a subset of the $k$th…
100
votes
2 answers

Mathematical precise definition of a PDE being elliptic, parabolic or hyperbolic

what is the general definition for some partial differential equation being called elliptic, parabolic or hyperbolic - in particular, if the PDE is nonlinear and above second-order. So far, I have not found any precise definition in literature.
shuhalo
  • 8,084
69
votes
6 answers

Is there a reason it is so rare we can solve differential equations?

Speaking about ALL differential equations, it is extremely rare to find analytical solutions. Further, simple differential equations made of basic functions usually tend to have ludicrously complicated solutions or be unsolvable. Is there some…
64
votes
4 answers

Why is the Laplacian important in Riemannian geometry?

As I've learned more Riemannian geometry, many of my teachers have said that studying the Laplacian (and its eigenvalues) is very important. But I must admit, I've never fully understood why. Fundamentally, I would like to know why the Laplacian…
64
votes
3 answers

Why are certain PDE called "elliptic", "hyperbolic", or "parabolic"?

Why are the Partial Differential Equations so named? i.e, elliptical, hyperbolic, and parabolic. I do know the condition at which a general second order partial differential equation becomes these, but I don't understand why they are so named? Does…
55
votes
2 answers

Intuitive explanation of the difference between waves in odd and even dimensions

Motivation: In odd dimensions, solutions to the wave equation: $$u_{tt}(x,t)=\nabla^2 u(x,t), \qquad u_t(x,0)=0, \qquad u(x,0)=f(x)$$ where $t \geq 0$ and $x \in \mathbb{R}^n$, have the nice property that the value of $u(x,t)$ only depends on the…
53
votes
2 answers

Why are mathematician so interested to find theory for solving partial differential equations but not for integral equation?

Why are mathematician so interested to find theory for solving partial differential equations (for example Navier-Stokes equation) but not for integral equations?
53
votes
3 answers

Why are Sobolev spaces useful?

Why are Sobolev spaces useful, and what problems were they developed to overcome? I'm particularly interested in their relation to PDEs, as they are often described as the 'natural space in which to look for PDE solutions' - why is this? How do weak…
1
2 3
99 100