An inverse spectral problem related to the Geng-Xue two-component Peakon equation / Hans Lundmark, Jacek Szmigielski
Type de document : MonographieCollection : Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, 1155Langue : anglais.Pays: Etats Unis.Éditeur : Providence (R.I.) : American Mathematical Society, 2016Description : 1 vol. (VII-87 p.) : ill. ; 26 cmISBN: 9781470420260.ISSN: 0065-9266.Bibliographie : Bibliogr. p. [85]-87. Index.Sujet MSC : 35Q53, PDEs of mathematical physics and other areas of application, KdV equations (Korteweg-de Vries equations)34L25, Ordinary differential equations, Scattering theory, inverse scattering involving ordinary differential operators
35P05, Spectral theory and eigenvalue problems for PDEs, General topics in linear spectral theory for PDEs
35Q51, PDEs of mathematical physics and other areas of application, Soliton equations
35R30, Miscellaneous topics in partial differential equations, Inverse problems for PDEsEn-ligne : zbMath | MSN | ArXiv | AMS-résumé
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Bibliogr. p. [85]-87. Index
Authors’ abstract: We solve a spectral and an inverse spectral problem arising in the computation of peakon solutions to the two-component PDE derived by Geng and Xue as a generalization of the Novikov and Degasperis-Procesi equations. Like the spectral problems for those equations, this one is of a ‘discrete cubic string’ type – a nonselfadjoint generalization of a classical inhomogeneous string – but presents some interesting novel features: there are two Lax pairs, both of which contribute to the correct complete spectral data, and the solution to the inverse problem can be expressed using quantities related to Cauchy biorthogonal polynomials with two different spectral measures. The latter extends the range of previous applications of Cauchy biorthogonal polynomials to peakons, which featured either two identical, or two closely related, measures. The method used to solve the spectral problem hinges on the hidden presence of oscillatory kernels of Gantmacher-Krein type implying that the spectrum of the boundary value problem is positive and simple. The inverse spectral problem is solved by a method which generalizes, to a nonselfadjoint case, M. G. Krein’s solution of the inverse problem for the Stieltjes string.
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