Complex analysis and differential equations

2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamaz Vashakmadze

Abstract The basic problem of satisfaction of boundary conditions is considered when the generalized stress vector is given on the surfaces of elastic plates and shells. This problem has so far remained open for both refined theories in a wide sense and hierarchic type models. In the linear case, it was formulated by I. N. Vekua for hierarchic models. In the nonlinear case, bending and compression-expansion processes do not split and in this context the exact structure is presented for the system of differential equations of von Kármán–Mindlin–Reisner (KMR) type, constructed without using a variety of ad hoc assumptions since one of the two relations of this system in the classical form is the compatibility condition, but not the equilibrium equation. In this paper, a unity mathematical theory is elaborated in both linear and nonlinear cases for anisotropic inhomogeneous elastic thin-walled structures. The theory approximately satisfies the corresponding system of partial differential equations and the boundary conditions on the surfaces of such structures. The problem is investigated and solved for hierarchic models too. The obtained results broaden the sphere of applications of complex analysis methods. The classical theory of finding a general solution of partial differential equations of complex analysis, which in the linear case was thoroughly developed in the works of Goursat, Weyl, Walsh, Bergman, Kolosov, Muskhelishvili, Bers, Vekua and others, is extended to the solution of basic nonlinear differential equations containing the nonlinear summand, which is a composition of Laplace and Monge–Ampére operators.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven G. Krantz ◽  
Estela A. Gavosto ◽  
Marco M. Peloso

Author(s):  
N Flyer ◽  
A.S Fokas

A new method, combining complex analysis with numerics, is introduced for solving a large class of linear partial differential equations (PDEs). This includes any linear constant coefficient PDE, as well as a limited class of PDEs with variable coefficients (such as the Laplace and the Helmholtz equations in cylindrical coordinates). The method yields novel integral representations, even for the solution of classical problems that would normally be solved via the Fourier or Laplace transforms. Examples include the heat equation and the first and second versions of the Stokes equation for arbitrary initial and boundary data on the half-line. The new method has advantages in comparison with classical methods, such as avoiding the solution of ordinary differential equations that result from the classical transforms, as well as constructing integral solutions in the complex plane which converge exponentially fast and which are uniformly convergent at the boundaries. As a result, these solutions are well suited for numerics, allowing the solution to be computed at any point in space and time without the need to time step. Simple deformation of the contours of integration followed by mapping the contours from the complex plane to the real line allow for fast and efficient numerical evaluation of the integrals.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asghar Qadir

Lie symmetry analysis provides a systematic method of obtaining exact solutions of nonlinear (systems of) differential equations, whether partial or ordinary. Of special interest is the procedure that Lie developed to transform scalar nonlinear second-order ordinary differential equations to linear form. Not much work was done in this direction to start with, but recently there have been various developments. Here, first the original work of Lie (and the early developments on it), and then more recent developments based on geometry and complex analysis, apart from Lie’s own method of algebra (namely, Lie group theory), are reviewed. It is relevant to mention that much of the work isnotlinearization but uses the base of linearization.


2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (suppl.1) ◽  
pp. 49-58
Author(s):  
Vesna Milosevic-Mitic ◽  
Tasko Maneski ◽  
Nina Andjelic ◽  
Ljubica Milovic ◽  
Ana Petrovic ◽  
...  

The subject of the paper is the temperature distribution in the thin metallic ferromagnetic plate influenced by moving linear high frequency induction heater. As a result of high frequency electromagnetic field, conducting currents appear in the part of the plate. Distribution of the eddy-current power across the plate thickness is obtained by use of complex analysis. The influences of the heater frequency, magnetic field intensity and plate thickness on the heat power density were discussed. By treating this power as a moving heat source, differential equations governing distribution of the temperature field are formulated. Temperature across the plate thickness is assumed to be in linear form. Differential equations are analytically solved by using integral-transform technique, Fourier finite-sine and finite-cosine transform and Laplace transform. The influence of the heater velocity to the plate temperature is presented on numerical examples based on theoretically obtained results.


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