How would we solve the same initial value

palmantkf4u

palmantkf4u

Answered question

2022-03-29

How would we solve the same initial value problem but instead of cR being a constant we have a function f:Rn×[0,t)R in its place such that the problem becomes:
{ut+b(Dxu)+f(x,t)u=h(x,t)in Rn×(0,)u(x,0)=g(x)on Rn×{t=0}
What steps would I take to find a function u(x,t) that satisfies this? I am assuming u(x,t) will be similar to the function I found for the original problem but with some additional integrals (after playing with it for a little), but I am unsure.
I am fairly new to partial differential equations so any help will be appreciated.

Answer & Explanation

Marquis Ibarra

Marquis Ibarra

Beginner2022-03-30Added 9 answers

Step 1
I'll illustrate with n=2, but of course this process is true for any dimension. I'll also adopt the t,x convention, i.e writing u(t,x1,x2). Writing the equation in typical form, and giving it some general initial data
tu+b11u+b22u=h-f u

u(γ(r1,r2))=φ(r1,r2)
Where γ:23 is a parametric surface in (t,x) space (parameterized by, in this case, I am using r as the parameters). In our example of course
γ(r1,r2)=(0,r1,r2)
Step 2
We write our characteristic equations, where I have introduced the notations x=(x1,x2),b=(b1,b2) and r=(r1,r2) to save space
st(r,s)=1

sx(r,s)=b

sv(r,s)=h(t(r,s),x(r,s))-f(t(r,s),x(r,s)) v(r,s)
Coupled with the initial data
t(r,0)=0

x(r,0)=r

v(r,0)=φ(r)
I have chosen v as the function so that, once we have inverted these expressions to find r(t,x),s(t,x) that
u(t,x)=v(r(t,x),s(t,x))
Your equation in your comment is not quite right. Forgetting some rigor when it comes to arguments, it should read roughly
v(s)=h(x,t)f(x,t)v(s)
Not just v(s)=f(x,t)v(s)

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