Fourier-Laplace transform of mixed PDE?

ThatsRightJack
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
I have a third order derivative of a variable, say U, which is a function of both space and time.

du/dx * du/dx * du/dt or (d^3(U)/(dt*dx^2))

The Fourier transform of du/dx is simply ik*F(u) where F(u) is the Fourier transform of u. The Fourier transform of d^2(u)/(dx^2) is simply -(k^2)*F(u) where F(u) is again the Fourier transform of u. My question is, how do handle the time derivative part with a Laplace transform? What would the Fourier-Laplace transform of the given PDE look like?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
A point about your notation: (du/dx)(du/dx)(du/dt) is NOT a third derivative, it is a product of three first derivatives.

Now, a Laplace-Fourier transform has to be taken with respect to a specific variable. If you are taking the transform of \partial^3f/\partial x^2\partial t with respect to x, it the same as transform of the second derivative. If with respect to t, it is the same as the transform of the first derivative.
 
Yes, you're right. That was not the correct notation. Sorry!

As far as the Laplace-Fourier transform is concerned, the Fourier transform of the spatial derivatives is taken with respect to x with the transform variable "k" and the Laplace transform of the time derivative is taken with respect to t with the transform variable "w". I'm still a little unclear as to what the final transform function looks like?

If this is the Fourier transform of d^2(u)/(dx^2), with respect to x using the tansform variable "k":
-(k^2)*F(u)
where F(u) is the Fourier transform of u, what would the Laplace transform of that be with respect to t using the transform variable "w" ?
 
Thread 'Direction Fields and Isoclines'
I sketched the isoclines for $$ m=-1,0,1,2 $$. Since both $$ \frac{dy}{dx} $$ and $$ D_{y} \frac{dy}{dx} $$ are continuous on the square region R defined by $$ -4\leq x \leq 4, -4 \leq y \leq 4 $$ the existence and uniqueness theorem guarantees that if we pick a point in the interior that lies on an isocline there will be a unique differentiable function (solution) passing through that point. I understand that a solution exists but I unsure how to actually sketch it. For example, consider a...

Similar threads

Replies
4
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
11
Views
3K
Replies
12
Views
2K
Replies
11
Views
2K
Replies
17
Views
3K
Back
Top