报告人:Prof. Folkert Müller-Hoissen
单位:德国哥廷根大学理论物理研究所、德国马克斯普朗克研究所
时间:2019年10月15日(周二)10:00-11:00
地点:长安校区东学楼二层 非线性科学研究中心报告厅(0227)
报告摘要:The
Korteweg-deVries (KdV) equation is a prime example of a "soliton equation",
a partial differential (or difference) equation possessing exact solutions of
which an arbitrary number can be superposed in a nonlinear way. For KdV, these
solutions are waves exponentially localized in the spatial dimension and
exhibit only a spatial displacement due to their interaction. For a matrix
version of KdV, solitons carry "internal" degrees of freedom, which
we call polarizations, and there is more happening when they interact. The
2-soliton solution determines a map of two "incoming" to two
"outgoing" polarizations (where "in" and "out"
refer to large negative, respectively positive values of time). This map turned
out to be a solution of the set-theoretical Yang-Baxter equation, a
"Yang-Baxter map" for short (Veselov 2004), which is actually a
statement about the interaction of three solitons. Whereas polarizations can be
assigned to solitons asymptotically (for large negative and large positive
times), when they get closer together they merge as waves and loose their
identity. However, taking the "tropical limit" of a soliton solution
reveals their identity and we can follow the evolution of polarizations for all
times. The tropical limit of a soliton solution of an equation like KdV or
Boussinesq, for example, consists of a planar, piecewise linear graph, together
with polarizations along its segments. But in case of the Boussinesq equation,
a Yang-Baxter map is no longer sufficient to describe the evolution of
polarizations along a tropical limit graph, though it works for a subclass of
solutions.
In this talk we will report, more
generally, on corresponding insights for the KP equation, which generalizes KdV
to three dimensions, and the two-dimensional Toda lattice equation.
报告人简介:Folkert Müller-Hoissen教授目前工作于德国哥廷根大学理论物理研究所和德国马克斯普朗克研究所,是国际上可积系统和广义相对论、理论物理领域的著名学者。
望各位老师和同学踊跃参加!