Darboux transformation
Mathematical method From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematics, the Darboux transformation, named after Gaston Darboux (1842–1917), is a method of generating a new equation and its solution from the known ones. It is widely used in inverse scattering theory, in the theory of orthogonal polynomials,[1][2] and as a way of constructing soliton solutions of the KdV hierarchy.[3] From the operator-theoretic point of view, this method corresponds to the factorization of the initial second order differential operator into a product of first order differential expressions and subsequent exchange of these factors, and is thus sometimes called the single commutation method in mathematics literature.[4] The Darboux transformation has applications in supersymmetric quantum mechanics.[5][6]
History
The idea goes back to Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.[7]
Method
Summarize
Perspective
Let be a solution of the equation
and be a fixed strictly positive solution of the same equation for some . Then for ,
is a solution of the equation
where Also, for , one solution of the latter differential equation is and its general solution can be found by d’Alembert's method:
where and are arbitrary constants.
Eigenvalue problems
Darboux transformation modifies not only the differential equation but also the boundary conditions. This transformation makes it possible to reduce eigenparameter-dependent boundary conditions to boundary conditions independent of the eigenvalue parameter – one of the Dirichlet, Neumann or Robin conditions.[8][9][10][11] On the other hand, it also allows one to convert inverse square singularities to Dirichlet boundary conditions and vice versa.[12][13] Thus Darboux transformations relate eigenparameter-dependent boundary conditions with inverse square singularities.[14]
References
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