I came across the following form of first order linear

Zaccagliaodi

Zaccagliaodi

Answered question

2022-02-25

I came across the following form of first order linear partial differential equation and I was wondering if there is a name for it?
gxfygyfx=h(x,y),
where g(x,y) as well as h(x,y) are given and f(x,y) is the unknown.

Answer & Explanation

faraidz3i

faraidz3i

Beginner2022-02-26Added 10 answers

As Cameron Williams said, this is a first-order linear PDE, to which the method of characteristics can be applied. Your equation has a special form thanks to g; in fact, the left hand side of the equation is known as the Poisson bracket of f and g. A consequence of this is that the characteristic curves of the PDE are precisely the level sets g(x,y)=c.
Let's see why. Let (x(t),y(t)) be any solution curve of the ODE
x(t)=gy(x(t),y(t))
y(t)==gx(x(t),y(t))
(I prefer using subscripts for derivatives.) This curve is a level curve of g, because
ddtg(x(t),y(t))=xgx+ygy=gygx+gxgy=0
Also, the derivative of unknown function f along this curve is
ddtf(x(t),y(t))=xfx+yfy=gyfx+gxfy=h(x(t),y(t))
Thus, the problem of solving the PDE splits into parametrizing level curves of g, and then integrating h along those curves.

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