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A Stability Technique for Evolution Partial Differential Equations: A Dynamical Systems Approach

A Stability Technique for Evolution Partial Differential Equations: A Dynamical Systems Approach
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Field name Details
Dewey Class 515.353
Title A Stability Technique for Evolution Partial Differential Equations ([EBook] :) : A Dynamical Systems Approach / / by Victor A. Galaktionov, Juan Luis Vázquez.
Author Galaktionov, Victor A.
Added Personal Name Vazquez, Juan Luis author.
Other name(s) SpringerLink (Online service)
Publication Boston, MA : : Birkhäuser Boston, , 2004.
Physical Details XIX, 377 p. : online resource.
Series Progress in nonlinear differential equations and their applications ; 56
ISBN 9781461220503
Summary Note common feature is that these evolution problems can be formulated as asymptoti­ cally small perturbations of certain dynamical systems with better-known behaviour. Now, it usually happens that the perturbation is small in a very weak sense, hence the difficulty (or impossibility) of applying more classical techniques. Though the method originated with the analysis of critical behaviour for evolu­ tion PDEs, in its abstract formulation it deals with a nonautonomous abstract differ­ ential equation (NDE) (1) Ut = A(u) + C(u, t), t > 0, where u has values in a Banach space, like an LP space, A is an autonomous (time-independent) operator and C is an asymptotically small perturbation, so that C(u(t), t) ~ ° as t ~ 00 along orbits {u(t)} of the evolution in a sense to be made precise, which in practice can be quite weak. We work in a situation in which the autonomous (limit) differential equation (ADE) Ut = A(u) (2) has a well-known asymptotic behaviour, and we want to prove that for large times the orbits of the original evolution problem converge to a certain class of limits of the autonomous equation. More precisely, we want to prove that the orbits of (NDE) are attracted by a certain limit set [2* of (ADE), which may consist of equilibria of the autonomous equation, or it can be a more complicated object.:
Contents note Introduction: A Stability Approach and Nonlinear Models -- Stability Theorem: A Dynamical Systems Approach -- Nonlinear Heat Equations: Basic Models and Mathematical Techniques -- Equation of Superslow Diffusion -- Quasilinear Heat Equations with Absorption. The Critical Exponent -- Porous Medium Equation with Critical Strong Absorption -- The Fast Diffusion Equation with Critical Exponent -- The Porous Medium Equation in an Exterior Domain -- Blow-up Free-Boundary Patterns for the Navier-Stokes Equations -- The Equation ut = uxx + uln2u: Regional Blow-up -- Blow-up in Quasilinear Heat Equations Described by Hamilton-Jacobi Equations -- A Fully Nonlinear Equation from Detonation Theory -- Further Applications to Second- and Higher-Order Equations -- References -- Index.
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/10.1007/978-1-4612-2050-3
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