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Differential equations book for enginners
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“True Laws of Nature cannot be linear.” “The search for truth is more precious than its possession.” “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not a bit sim- pler.” Albert Einstein
“No human investigation can be called real science if it cannot be demon- strated mathematically.”
Leonardo Da Vinci
“First causes are not known to us, but they are subjected to simple and constant laws that can be studied by observation and whose study is the goal of Natural Philosophy ... Heat penetrates, as does gravity, all the substances of the universe; its rays occupy all regions of space. The aim of our work is to expose the mathematical laws that this element follows ... The differential equations for the propagation of heat express the most general conditions and reduce physical questions to problems in pure Analysis that is properly the object of the theory.” James Clerk Maxwell
“One of the properties inherent in mathematics is that any real progress is accompanied by the discovery and development of new methods and sim- plifications of previous procedures ... The unified character of mathematics lies in its very nature; indeed, mathematics is the foundation of all exact natural sciences.” David Hilbert
“ ... partial differential equations are the basis of all physical theorems. In the theory of sound in gases, liquid and solids, in the investigations of elasticity, in optics, everywhere partial differential equations formulate basic laws of nature which can be checked against experiments.” Bernhard Riemann
“The effective numerical treatment of partial differential equations is not a handicraft, but an art.” Folklore
“The advantage of the principle of least action is that in one and the same equation it relates the quantities that are immediately relevant not only to mechanics but also to electrodynamics and thermodynamics; these quantities are space, time and potential.” Max Planck
Preface to the Fourth Edition................. xv
Contents xiii
“A teacher can never truly teach unless he is still learning himself. A lamp can never light another lamp unless it continues to burn its own flame. The teacher who has come to the end of his subject, who has no living traffic with his knowledge but merely repeats his lessons to his students, can only load their minds; he cannot quicken them.”
Rabindranath Tagore An Indian Poet 1913 Nobel Prize Winner for Literature
The previous three editions of our book were very well received and used as a senior undergraduate or graduate-level text and research reference in the United States and abroad for many years. We received many comments and suggestions from many students, faculty and researchers around the world. These comments and criticisms have been very helpful, beneficial, and encouraging. This fourth edition is the result of the input. Another reason for adding this fourth edition to the literature is the fact that there have been major discoveries of new ideas, results and methods for the solution of linear and nonlinear partial differential equations in the second half of the twentieth century. It is becoming even more desirable for mathematicians, scientists and engineers to pursue study and research on these topics. So what has changed, and will continue to change is the nature of the topics that are of interest in mathematics, applied mathematics, physics and engineering, the evolution of books such is this one is a history of these shifting concerns. This new and revised edition preserves the basic content and style of the third edition published in 1989. As with the previous editions, this book has been revised primarily as a comprehensive text for senior undergraduates or beginning graduate students and a research reference for professionals in mathematics, science and engineering, and other applied sciences. The main goal of the book is to develop required analytical skills on the part of the
xvi Preface to the Fourth Edition
reader, rather than to focus on the importance of more abstract formulation, with full mathematical rigor. Indeed, our major emphasis is to provide an accessible working knowledge of the analytical and numerical methods with proofs required in mathematics, applied mathematics, physics, and engineering. The revised edition was greatly influenced by the statements that Lord Rayleigh and Richard Feynman made as follows: “In the mathematical investigation I have usually employed such meth- ods as present themselves naturally to a physicist. The pure mathematician will complain, and (it must be confessed) sometimes with justice, of defi- cient rigor. But to this question there are two sides. For, however important it may be to maintain a uniformly high standard in pure mathematics, the physicist may occasionally do well to rest content with arguments, which are fairly satisfactory and conclusive from his point of view. To his mind, exercised in a different order of ideas, the more severe procedure of the pure mathematician may appear not more but less demonstrative. And further, in many cases of difficulty to insist upon highest standard would mean the exclusion of the subject altogether in view of the space that would be required.” Lord Rayleigh
“... However, the emphasis should be somewhat more on how to do the mathematics quickly and easily, and what formulas are true, rather than the mathematicians’ interest in methods of rigorous proof.” Richard P. Feynman
We have made many additions and changes in order to modernize the contents and to improve the clarity of the previous edition. We have also taken advantage of this new edition to correct typographical errors, and to update the bibliography, to include additional topics, examples of applica- tions, exercises, comments and observations, and in some cases, to entirely rewrite and reorganize many sections. This is plenty of material in the book for a year-long course. Some of the material need not be covered in a course work and can be left for the readers to study on their own in order to prepare them for further study and research. This edition contains a collection of over 900 worked examples and exercises with answers and hints to selected exercises. Some of the major changes and additions include the following:
xviii Preface to the Fourth Edition
students as well as a research reference for professionals in mathematics, applied mathematics, physics and engineering. It is our pleasure to express our grateful thanks to many friends, col- leagues, and students around the world who offered their suggestions and help at various stages of the preparation of the book. We offer special thanks to Dr. Andras Balogh, Mr. Kanadpriya Basu, and Dr. Dambaru Bhatta for drawing all figures, and to Mrs. Veronica Martinez for typing the manuscript with constant changes and revisions. In spite of the best efforts of everyone involved, some typographical errors doubtless remain. Finally, we wish to express our special thanks to Tom Grasso and the staff of Birkh¨auser Boston for their help and cooperation.
Tyn Myint-U
Lokenath Debnath
The theory of partial differential equations has long been one of the most important fields in mathematics. This is essentially due to the frequent occurrence and the wide range of applications of partial differential equa- tions in many branches of physics, engineering, and other sciences. With much interest and great demand for theory and applications in diverse ar- eas of science and engineering, several excellent books on PDEs have been published. This book is written to present an approach based mainly on the mathematics, physics, and engineering problems and their solutions, and also to construct a course appropriate for all students of mathemati- cal, physical, and engineering sciences. Our primary objective, therefore, is not concerned with an elegant exposition of general theory, but rather to provide students with the fundamental concepts, the underlying principles, a wide range of applications, and various methods of solution of partial differential equations. This book, a revised and expanded version of the second edition pub- lished in 1980, was written for a one-semester course in the theory and appli- cations of partial differential equations. It has been used by advanced under- graduate or beginning graduate students in applied mathematics, physics, engineering, and other applied sciences. The prerequisite for its study is a standard calculus sequence with elementary ordinary differential equations. This revised edition is in part based on lectures given by Tyn Myint-U at Manhattan College and by Lokenath Debnath at the University of Central Florida. This revision preserves the basic content and style of the earlier editions, which were written by Tyn Myint-U alone. However, the authors have made some major additions and changes in this third edition in order to modernize the contents and to improve clarity. Two new chapters added are on nonlinear PDEs, and on numerical and approximation methods. New material emphasizing applications has been inserted. New examples and ex- ercises have been provided. Many physical interpretations of mathematical solutions have been added. Also, the authors have improved the exposition by reorganizing some material and by making examples, exercises, and ap-
Preface to the Third Edition xxi
Chapter 11 provides an introduction to the use of integral transform methods and their applications to numerous problems in applied mathe- matics, mathematical physics, and engineering sciences. The fundamental properties and the techniques of Fourier, Laplace, Hankel, and Mellin trans- forms are discussed in some detail. Applications to problems concerning heat flows, fluid flows, elastic waves, current and potential electric trans- mission lines are included in this chapter. Chapters 12 and 13 are entirely new. First-order and second-order non- linear PDEs are covered in Chapter 12. Most of the contents of this chapter have been developed during the last twenty-five years. Several new nonlinear PDEs including the one-dimensional nonlinear wave equation, Whitham’s equation, Burgers’ equation, the Korteweg–de Vries equation, and the non- linear Schr¨odinger equation are solved. The solutions of these equations are then discussed with physical significance. Special emphasis is given to the fundamental similarities and differences in the properties of the solutions to the corresponding linear and nonlinear equations under consideration. The final chapter is devoted to the major numerical and approximation methods for finding solutions of PDEs. A fairly detailed treatment of ex- plicit and implicit finite difference methods is given with applications The variational method and the Euler–Lagrange equations are described with many applications. Also included are the Rayleigh–Ritz, the Galerkin, and the Kantorovich methods of approximation with many illustrations and applications. This new edition contains almost four hundred examples and exercises, which are either directly associated with applications or phrased in terms of the physical and engineering contexts in which they arise. The exercises truly complement the text, and answers to most exercises are provided at the end of the book. The Appendix has been expanded to include some basic properties of the Gamma function and the tables of Fourier, Laplace, and Hankel transforms. For students wishing to know more about the subject or to have further insight into the subject matter, important references are listed in the Bibliography. The chapters on mathematical models, Fourier series and integrals, and eigenvalue problems are self-contained, so these chapters can be omitted for those students who have prior knowledge of the subject. An attempt has been made to present a clear and concise exposition of the mathematics used in analyzing a variety of problems. With this in mind, the chapters are carefully organized to enable students to view the material in an orderly perspective. For example, the results and theorems in the chapters on Fourier series and integrals and on eigenvalue problems are explicitly mentioned, whenever necessary, to avoid confusion with their use in the development of PDEs. A wide range of problems subject to various boundary conditions has been included to improve the student’s understanding. In this third edition, specific changes and additions include the following:
xxii Preface to the Third Edition
As a text on partial differential equations for students in applied mathe- matics, physics, engineering, and applied sciences, this edition provides the student with the art of combining mathematics with intuitive and physical thinking to develop the most effective approach to solving problems. In preparing this edition, the authors wish to express their sincere thanks to those who have read the manuscript and offered many valuable suggestions and comments. The authors also wish to express their thanks to the editor and the staff of Elsevier–North Holland, Inc. for their kind help and cooperation.
Tyn Myint-U Lokenath Debnath