Kneser's theorem (differential equations)

From testwiki
Revision as of 16:59, 17 August 2024 by 132.231.141.109 (talk) (Statement of the theorem due to H. Kneser)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description In mathematics, the Kneser theorem can refer to two distinct theorems in the field of ordinary differential equations:

Statement of the theorem due to A. Kneser

Consider an ordinary linear homogeneous differential equation of the form

y+q(x)y=0

with

q:[0,+)

continuous. We say this equation is oscillating if it has a solution y with infinitely many zeros, and non-oscillating otherwise.

The theorem states[1] that the equation is non-oscillating if

lim supx+x2q(x)<14

and oscillating if

lim infx+x2q(x)>14.

Example

To illustrate the theorem consider

q(x)=(14a)x2forx>0

where a is real and non-zero. According to the theorem, solutions will be oscillating or not depending on whether a is positive (non-oscillating) or negative (oscillating) because

lim supx+x2q(x)=lim infx+x2q(x)=14a

To find the solutions for this choice of q(x), and verify the theorem for this example, substitute the 'Ansatz'

y(x)=xn

which gives

n(n1)+14a=(n12)2a=0

This means that (for non-zero a) the general solution is

y(x)=Ax12+a+Bx12a

where A and B are arbitrary constants.

It is not hard to see that for positive a the solutions do not oscillate while for negative a=ω2 the identity

x12±iω=x e±(iω)lnx=x (cos(ωlnx)±isin(ωlnx))

shows that they do.

The general result follows from this example by the Sturm–Picone comparison theorem.

Extensions

There are many extensions to this result, such as the Gesztesy–Ünal criterion.[2]

Statement of the theorem due to H. Kneser

While Peano's existence theorem guarantees the existence of solutions of certain initial values problems with continuous right hand side, H. Kneser's theorem deals with the topology of the set of those solutions. Precisely, H. Kneser's theorem states the following:[3][4]

Let f:×nn be a continuous function on the region :=[t0,t0+a]×{xn:xx0b}, and such that |f(t,x)|M for all (t,x).

Given a real number c satisfying t0<ct0+min(a,b/M), define the set Sc as the set of points xc for which there is a solution x=x(t) of x˙=f(t,x) such that x(t0)=x0 and x(c)=xc. Then Sc is a closed and connected set.

References

Template:Reflist