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Fredholm integral equation

In mathematics, the Fredholm integral equation is an integral equation whose solution gives rise to Fredholm theory, the study of Fredholm kernels and Fredholm operators. The integral equation was studied by Ivar Fredholm. A useful method to solve such equations, the Adomian decomposition method, is due to George Adomian.

Equation of the first kind edit

A Fredholm equation is an integral equation in which the term containing the kernel function (defined below) has constants as integration limits. A closely related form is the Volterra integral equation which has variable integral limits.

An inhomogeneous Fredholm equation of the first kind is written as

 

and the problem is, given the continuous kernel function   and the function  , to find the function  .

An important case of these types of equation is the case when the kernel is a function only of the difference of its arguments, namely  , and the limits of integration are ±∞, then the right hand side of the equation can be rewritten as a convolution of the functions   and   and therefore, formally, the solution is given by

 

where   and   are the direct and inverse Fourier transforms, respectively. This case would not be typically included under the umbrella of Fredholm integral equations, a name that is usually reserved for when the integral operator defines a compact operator (convolution operators on non-compact groups are non-compact, since, in general, the spectrum of the operator of convolution with   contains the range of  , which is usually a non-countable set, whereas compact operators have discrete countable spectra).

Equation of the second kind edit

An inhomogeneous Fredholm equation of the second kind is given as

 

Given the kernel  , and the function  , the problem is typically to find the function  .

A standard approach to solving this is to use iteration, amounting to the resolvent formalism; written as a series, the solution is known as the Liouville–Neumann series.

General theory edit

The general theory underlying the Fredholm equations is known as Fredholm theory. One of the principal results is that the kernel K yields a compact operator. Compactness may be shown by invoking equicontinuity. As an operator, it has a spectral theory that can be understood in terms of a discrete spectrum of eigenvalues that tend to 0.

Applications edit

Fredholm equations arise naturally in the theory of signal processing, for example as the famous spectral concentration problem popularized by David Slepian. The operators involved are the same as linear filters. They also commonly arise in linear forward modeling and inverse problems. In physics, the solution of such integral equations allows for experimental spectra to be related to various underlying distributions, for instance the mass distribution of polymers in a polymeric melt, [1] or the distribution of relaxation times in the system.[2] In addition, Fredholm integral equations also arise in fluid mechanics problems involving hydrodynamic interactions near finite-sized elastic interfaces.[3][4]

A specific application of Fredholm equation is the generation of photo-realistic images in computer graphics, in which the Fredholm equation is used to model light transport from the virtual light sources to the image plane. The Fredholm equation is often called the rendering equation in this context.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Honerkamp, J.; Weese, J. (1990). "Tikhonovs regularization method for ill-posed problems". Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics. 2 (1): 17–30. Bibcode:1990CMT.....2...17H. doi:10.1007/BF01170953.
  2. ^ Schäfer, H.; Sternin, E.; Stannarius, R.; Arndt, M.; Kremer, F. (18 March 1996). "Novel Approach to the Analysis of Broadband Dielectric Spectra". Physical Review Letters. 76 (12): 2177–2180. Bibcode:1996PhRvL..76.2177S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.76.2177. PMID 10060625.
  3. ^ Daddi-Moussa-Ider, A.; Kaoui, B.; Löwen, H. (9 April 2019). "Axisymmetric flow due to a Stokeslet near a finite-sized elastic membrane". Journal of the Physical Society of Japan. 88 (5): 054401. arXiv:1901.04485. doi:10.7566/JPSJ.88.054401.
  4. ^ Daddi-Moussa-Ider, A. (25 November 2020). "Asymmetric Stokes flow induced by a transverse point force acting near a finite-sized elastic membrane". Journal of the Physical Society of Japan. 89: 124401. arXiv:2006.14375. doi:10.7566/JPSJ.89.124401.

Further reading edit

  • Integral Equations at EqWorld: The World of Mathematical Equations.
  • A.D. Polyanin and A.V. Manzhirov, Handbook of Integral Equations, CRC Press, Boca Raton, 1998. ISBN 0-8493-2876-4
  • Khvedelidze, B.V.; Litvinov, G.L. (2001) [1994], "Fredholm kernel", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Simons, F. J.; Wieczorek, M. A.; Dahlen, F. A. (2006). "Spatiospectral concentration on a sphere". SIAM Review. 48 (3): 504–536. arXiv:math/0408424. Bibcode:2006SIAMR..48..504S. doi:10.1137/S0036144504445765.
  • Slepian, D. (1983). "Some comments on Fourier Analysis, uncertainty and modeling". SIAM Review. 25 (3): 379–393. doi:10.1137/1025078.
  • Press, WH; Teukolsky, SA; Vetterling, WT; Flannery, BP (2007). "Section 19.1. Fredholm Equations of the Second Kind". Numerical Recipes: The Art of Scientific Computing (3rd ed.). New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-88068-8.
  • Mathews, Jon; Walker, Robert L. (1970), Mathematical methods of physics (2nd ed.), New York: W. A. Benjamin, ISBN 0-8053-7002-1

External links edit

  • IntEQ: a Python package for numerically solving Fredholm integral equations

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In mathematics the Fredholm integral equation is an integral equation whose solution gives rise to Fredholm theory the study of Fredholm kernels and Fredholm operators The integral equation was studied by Ivar Fredholm A useful method to solve such equations the Adomian decomposition method is due to George Adomian Contents 1 Equation of the first kind 2 Equation of the second kind 3 General theory 4 Applications 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEquation of the first kind editA Fredholm equation is an integral equation in which the term containing the kernel function defined below has constants as integration limits A closely related form is the Volterra integral equation which has variable integral limits An inhomogeneous Fredholm equation of the first kind is written as g t abK t s f s ds displaystyle g t int a b K t s f s mathrm d s nbsp and the problem is given the continuous kernel function K displaystyle K nbsp and the function g displaystyle g nbsp to find the function f displaystyle f nbsp An important case of these types of equation is the case when the kernel is a function only of the difference of its arguments namely K t s K t s displaystyle K t s K t s nbsp and the limits of integration are then the right hand side of the equation can be rewritten as a convolution of the functions K displaystyle K nbsp and f displaystyle f nbsp and therefore formally the solution is given by f s Fw 1 Ft g t w Ft K t w Ft g t w Ft K t w e2piwsdw displaystyle f s mathcal F omega 1 left mathcal F t g t omega over mathcal F t K t omega right int infty infty mathcal F t g t omega over mathcal F t K t omega e 2 pi i omega s mathrm d omega nbsp where Ft displaystyle mathcal F t nbsp and Fw 1 displaystyle mathcal F omega 1 nbsp are the direct and inverse Fourier transforms respectively This case would not be typically included under the umbrella of Fredholm integral equations a name that is usually reserved for when the integral operator defines a compact operator convolution operators on non compact groups are non compact since in general the spectrum of the operator of convolution with K displaystyle K nbsp contains the range of FK displaystyle mathcal F K nbsp which is usually a non countable set whereas compact operators have discrete countable spectra Equation of the second kind editAn inhomogeneous Fredholm equation of the second kind is given as f t f t l abK t s f s ds displaystyle varphi t f t lambda int a b K t s varphi s mathrm d s nbsp Given the kernel K t s displaystyle K t s nbsp and the function f t displaystyle f t nbsp the problem is typically to find the function f t displaystyle varphi t nbsp A standard approach to solving this is to use iteration amounting to the resolvent formalism written as a series the solution is known as the Liouville Neumann series General theory editThe general theory underlying the Fredholm equations is known as Fredholm theory One of the principal results is that the kernel K yields a compact operator Compactness may be shown by invoking equicontinuity As an operator it has a spectral theory that can be understood in terms of a discrete spectrum of eigenvalues that tend to 0 Applications editFredholm equations arise naturally in the theory of signal processing for example as the famous spectral concentration problem popularized by David Slepian The operators involved are the same as linear filters They also commonly arise in linear forward modeling and inverse problems In physics the solution of such integral equations allows for experimental spectra to be related to various underlying distributions for instance the mass distribution of polymers in a polymeric melt 1 or the distribution of relaxation times in the system 2 In addition Fredholm integral equations also arise in fluid mechanics problems involving hydrodynamic interactions near finite sized elastic interfaces 3 4 A specific application of Fredholm equation is the generation of photo realistic images in computer graphics in which the Fredholm equation is used to model light transport from the virtual light sources to the image plane The Fredholm equation is often called the rendering equation in this context See also editLiouville Neumann series Volterra integral equation Fredholm alternativeReferences edit Honerkamp J Weese J 1990 Tikhonovs regularization method for ill posed problems Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics 2 1 17 30 Bibcode 1990CMT 2 17H doi 10 1007 BF01170953 Schafer H Sternin E Stannarius R Arndt M Kremer F 18 March 1996 Novel Approach to the Analysis of Broadband Dielectric Spectra Physical Review Letters 76 12 2177 2180 Bibcode 1996PhRvL 76 2177S doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 76 2177 PMID 10060625 Daddi Moussa Ider A Kaoui B Lowen H 9 April 2019 Axisymmetric flow due to a Stokeslet near a finite sized elastic membrane Journal of the Physical Society of Japan 88 5 054401 arXiv 1901 04485 doi 10 7566 JPSJ 88 054401 Daddi Moussa Ider A 25 November 2020 Asymmetric Stokes flow induced by a transverse point force acting near a finite sized elastic membrane Journal of the Physical Society of Japan 89 124401 arXiv 2006 14375 doi 10 7566 JPSJ 89 124401 Further reading editIntegral Equations at EqWorld The World of Mathematical Equations A D Polyanin and A V Manzhirov Handbook of Integral Equations CRC Press Boca Raton 1998 ISBN 0 8493 2876 4 Khvedelidze B V Litvinov G L 2001 1994 Fredholm kernel Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Simons F J Wieczorek M A Dahlen F A 2006 Spatiospectral concentration on a sphere SIAM Review 48 3 504 536 arXiv math 0408424 Bibcode 2006SIAMR 48 504S doi 10 1137 S0036144504445765 Slepian D 1983 Some comments on Fourier Analysis uncertainty and modeling SIAM Review 25 3 379 393 doi 10 1137 1025078 Press WH Teukolsky SA Vetterling WT Flannery BP 2007 Section 19 1 Fredholm Equations of the Second Kind Numerical Recipes The Art of Scientific Computing 3rd ed New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88068 8 Mathews Jon Walker Robert L 1970 Mathematical methods of physics 2nd ed New York W A Benjamin ISBN 0 8053 7002 1External links editIntEQ a Python package for numerically solving Fredholm integral equations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fredholm integral equation amp oldid 1140382012, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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