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Discrete Hamiltonian Systems: Difference Equations, Continued Fractions, and Riccati Equations /

Discrete Hamiltonian Systems: Difference Equations, Continued Fractions, and Riccati Equations /
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
Dewey Class 515.625
515.75
Title Discrete Hamiltonian Systems ([EBook] :) : Difference Equations, Continued Fractions, and Riccati Equations / / by Calvin D. Ahlbrandt, Allan C. Peterson.
Author Ahlbrandt, Calvin D.
Added Personal Name Peterson, Allan C. author.
Other name(s) SpringerLink (Online service)
Publication Boston, MA : : Springer US : : Imprint: Springer, , 1996.
Physical Details XIV, 376 p. : online resource.
Series Kluwer Texts in the Mathematical Sciences, A Graduate-Level Book Series 0927-4529 ; ; 16
ISBN 9781475724677
Summary Note 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.:
Contents note 1 Second Order Scalar Difference Equations -- 2 Continued Fractions -- 3 Symplectic Systems -- 4 Discrete Variational Theory -- 5 Symmetric Three Term Recurrence Relations -- 6 Discrete Riccati Equations for Three Term Recurrences -- 7 Green’s Functions for Nonhomogeneous Second Order Difference Equations -- 8 Disconjugacy Criteria -- 9 Discrete Linear Hamiltonian Systems -- References.
System details note Online access to this digital book is restricted to subscription institutions through IP address (only for SISSA internal users)
Internet Site http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-2467-7
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