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Lax pair

In mathematics, in the theory of integrable systems, a Lax pair is a pair of time-dependent matrices or operators that satisfy a corresponding differential equation, called the Lax equation. Lax pairs were introduced by Peter Lax to discuss solitons in continuous media. The inverse scattering transform makes use of the Lax equations to solve such systems.

Definition edit

A Lax pair is a pair of matrices or operators   dependent on time and acting on a fixed Hilbert space, and satisfying Lax's equation:

 

where   is the commutator. Often, as in the example below,   depends on   in a prescribed way, so this is a nonlinear equation for   as a function of  .

Isospectral property edit

It can then be shown that the eigenvalues and more generally the spectrum of L are independent of t. The matrices/operators L are said to be isospectral as   varies.

The core observation is that the matrices   are all similar by virtue of

 

where   is the solution of the Cauchy problem

 

where I denotes the identity matrix. Note that if P(t) is skew-adjoint, U(t,s) will be unitary.

In other words, to solve the eigenvalue problem Lψ = λψ at time t, it is possible to solve the same problem at time 0 where L is generally known better, and to propagate the solution with the following formulas:

  (no change in spectrum)
 

Through principal invariants edit

The result can also be shown using the invariants   for any  . These satisfy

 
due to the Lax equation, and since the characteristic polynomial can be written in terms of these traces, the spectrum is preserved by the flow.[1]

Link with the inverse scattering method edit

The above property is the basis for the inverse scattering method. In this method, L and P act on a functional space (thus ψ = ψ(t,x)), and depend on an unknown function u(t,x) which is to be determined. It is generally assumed that u(0,x) is known, and that P does not depend on u in the scattering region where  . The method then takes the following form:

  1. Compute the spectrum of  , giving   and  ,
  2. In the scattering region where   is known, propagate   in time by using   with initial condition  ,
  3. Knowing   in the scattering region, compute   and/or  .

Spectral curve edit

If the Lax matrix additionally depends on a complex parameter   (as is the case for say sine-Gordon), the equation

 
defines an algebraic curve in   with coordinates  . By the isospectral property, this curve is preserved under time translation. This is the spectral curve. Such curves appear in the theory of Hitchin systems.[2]

Zero-curvature representation edit

Any PDE which admits a Lax pair representation also admits a zero-curvature representation.[3] In fact, the zero-curvature representation is more general and for other integrable PDEs, such as the sine-Gordon equation, the Lax pair refers to matrices that satisfy the zero-curvature equation rather than the Lax equation. Furthermore, the zero-curvature representation makes the link between integrable systems and geometry manifest, culminating in Ward's programme to formulate known integrable systems as solutions to the anti-self dual Yang–Mills (ASDYM) equations.

Zero-curvature equation edit

The zero-curvature equations are described by a pair of matrix-valued functions  , where the subscripts denote coordinate indices rather than derivatives. Often the   dependence is through a single scalar function   and its derivatives. The zero-curvature equation is then

 
It is so called as it corresponds to the vanishing of the curvature tensor, which in this case is  . This differs from the conventional expression by some minus signs, which are ultimately unimportant.

Lax pair to zero-curvature edit

For an eigensolution to the Lax operator  , one has

 
If we instead enforce these, together with time independence of  , instead the Lax equation arises as a consistency equation for an overdetermined system.

The Lax pair   can be used to define the connection components  . When a PDE admits a zero-curvature representation but not a Lax equation representation, the connection components   are referred to as the Lax pair, and the connection as a Lax connection.

Examples edit

Korteweg–de Vries equation edit

The Korteweg–de Vries equation

 

can be reformulated as the Lax equation

 

with

  (a Sturm–Liouville operator)
 

where all derivatives act on all objects to the right. This accounts for the infinite number of first integrals of the KdV equation.

Kovalevskaya top edit

The previous example used an infinite dimensional Hilbert space. Examples are also possible with finite dimensional Hilbert spaces. These include Kovalevskaya top and the generalization to include an electric Field  .[4]

 

Heisenberg picture edit

In the Heisenberg picture of quantum mechanics, an observable A without explicit time t dependence satisfies

 

with H the Hamiltonian and ħ the reduced Planck constant. Aside from a factor, observables (without explicit time dependence) in this picture can thus be seen to form Lax pairs together with the Hamiltonian. The Schrödinger picture is then interpreted as the alternative expression in terms of isospectral evolution of these observables.

Further examples edit

Further examples of systems of equations that can be formulated as a Lax pair include:

The last is remarkable, as it implies that both the Schwarzschild metric and the Kerr metric can be understood as solitons.

References edit

  1. ^ Hitchin, N. J. (1999). Integrable systems : twistors, loop groups, and Riemann surfaces. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0198504217.
  2. ^ Hitchin, N. J. (1999). Integrable systems : twistors, loop groups, and Riemann surfaces. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198504214.
  3. ^ Dunajski, Maciej (2010). Solitons, instantons, and twistors. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 54–56. ISBN 978-0-19-857063-9.
  4. ^ Bobenko, A. I.; Reyman, A. G.; Semenov-Tian-Shansky, M. A. (1989). "The Kowalewski top 99 years later: a Lax pair, generalizations and explicit solutions". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 122 (2): 321–354. Bibcode:1989CMaPh.122..321B. doi:10.1007/BF01257419. ISSN 0010-3616. S2CID 121752578.
  5. ^ A. Sergyeyev, New integrable (3+1)-dimensional systems and contact geometry, Lett. Math. Phys. 108 (2018), no. 2, 359-376, arXiv:1401.2122 doi:10.1007/s11005-017-1013-4
  • Lax, P. (1968), "Integrals of nonlinear equations of evolution and solitary waves", Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, 21 (5): 467–490, doi:10.1002/cpa.3160210503 archive
  • P. Lax and R.S. Phillips, Scattering Theory for Automorphic Functions[1], (1976) Princeton University Press.

pair, mathematics, theory, integrable, systems, pair, time, dependent, matrices, operators, that, satisfy, corresponding, differential, equation, called, equation, were, introduced, peter, discuss, solitons, continuous, media, inverse, scattering, transform, m. In mathematics in the theory of integrable systems a Lax pair is a pair of time dependent matrices or operators that satisfy a corresponding differential equation called the Lax equation Lax pairs were introduced by Peter Lax to discuss solitons in continuous media The inverse scattering transform makes use of the Lax equations to solve such systems Contents 1 Definition 2 Isospectral property 2 1 Through principal invariants 2 2 Link with the inverse scattering method 2 3 Spectral curve 3 Zero curvature representation 3 1 Zero curvature equation 3 2 Lax pair to zero curvature 4 Examples 4 1 Korteweg de Vries equation 4 2 Kovalevskaya top 4 3 Heisenberg picture 4 4 Further examples 5 ReferencesDefinition editA Lax pair is a pair of matrices or operators L t P t displaystyle L t P t nbsp dependent on time and acting on a fixed Hilbert space and satisfying Lax s equation d L d t P L displaystyle frac dL dt P L nbsp where P L P L L P displaystyle P L PL LP nbsp is the commutator Often as in the example below P displaystyle P nbsp depends on L displaystyle L nbsp in a prescribed way so this is a nonlinear equation for L displaystyle L nbsp as a function of t displaystyle t nbsp Isospectral property editIt can then be shown that the eigenvalues and more generally the spectrum of L are independent of t The matrices operators L are said to be isospectral as t displaystyle t nbsp varies The core observation is that the matrices L t displaystyle L t nbsp are all similar by virtue of L t U t s L s U t s 1 displaystyle L t U t s L s U t s 1 nbsp where U t s displaystyle U t s nbsp is the solution of the Cauchy problem d d t U t s P t U t s U s s I displaystyle frac d dt U t s P t U t s qquad U s s I nbsp where I denotes the identity matrix Note that if P t is skew adjoint U t s will be unitary In other words to solve the eigenvalue problem Lps lps at time t it is possible to solve the same problem at time 0 where L is generally known better and to propagate the solution with the following formulas l t l 0 displaystyle lambda t lambda 0 nbsp no change in spectrum ps t P ps displaystyle frac partial psi partial t P psi nbsp Through principal invariants edit See also Invariants of tensors The result can also be shown using the invariants t r L n displaystyle mathrm tr L n nbsp for any n displaystyle n nbsp These satisfyd d t t r L n 0 displaystyle frac d dt mathrm tr L n 0 nbsp due to the Lax equation and since the characteristic polynomial can be written in terms of these traces the spectrum is preserved by the flow 1 Link with the inverse scattering method edit The above property is the basis for the inverse scattering method In this method L and P act on a functional space thus ps ps t x and depend on an unknown function u t x which is to be determined It is generally assumed that u 0 x is known and that P does not depend on u in the scattering region where x displaystyle Vert x Vert to infty nbsp The method then takes the following form Compute the spectrum of L 0 displaystyle L 0 nbsp giving l displaystyle lambda nbsp and ps 0 x displaystyle psi 0 x nbsp In the scattering region where P displaystyle P nbsp is known propagate ps displaystyle psi nbsp in time by using ps t t x P ps t x displaystyle frac partial psi partial t t x P psi t x nbsp with initial condition ps 0 x displaystyle psi 0 x nbsp Knowing ps displaystyle psi nbsp in the scattering region compute L t displaystyle L t nbsp and or u t x displaystyle u t x nbsp Spectral curve edit If the Lax matrix additionally depends on a complex parameter z displaystyle z nbsp as is the case for say sine Gordon the equationdet w I L z 0 displaystyle det wI L z 0 nbsp defines an algebraic curve in C 2 displaystyle mathbb C 2 nbsp with coordinates w z displaystyle w z nbsp By the isospectral property this curve is preserved under time translation This is the spectral curve Such curves appear in the theory of Hitchin systems 2 Zero curvature representation editAny PDE which admits a Lax pair representation also admits a zero curvature representation 3 In fact the zero curvature representation is more general and for other integrable PDEs such as the sine Gordon equation the Lax pair refers to matrices that satisfy the zero curvature equation rather than the Lax equation Furthermore the zero curvature representation makes the link between integrable systems and geometry manifest culminating in Ward s programme to formulate known integrable systems as solutions to the anti self dual Yang Mills ASDYM equations Zero curvature equation edit The zero curvature equations are described by a pair of matrix valued functions A x x t A t x t displaystyle A x x t A t x t nbsp where the subscripts denote coordinate indices rather than derivatives Often the x t displaystyle x t nbsp dependence is through a single scalar function f x t displaystyle varphi x t nbsp and its derivatives The zero curvature equation is then t A x x A t A x A t 0 displaystyle partial t A x partial x A t A x A t 0 nbsp It is so called as it corresponds to the vanishing of the curvature tensor which in this case is F m n m A m n A n m A n n A m A m A n displaystyle F mu nu partial mu A mu partial nu A nu partial mu A nu partial nu A mu A mu A nu nbsp This differs from the conventional expression by some minus signs which are ultimately unimportant Lax pair to zero curvature edit For an eigensolution to the Lax operator L displaystyle L nbsp one hasL ps l ps ps t A ps 0 displaystyle L psi lambda psi psi t A psi 0 nbsp If we instead enforce these together with time independence of l displaystyle lambda nbsp instead the Lax equation arises as a consistency equation for an overdetermined system The Lax pair L P displaystyle L P nbsp can be used to define the connection components A x A t displaystyle A x A t nbsp When a PDE admits a zero curvature representation but not a Lax equation representation the connection components A x A t displaystyle A x A t nbsp are referred to as the Lax pair and the connection as a Lax connection Examples editKorteweg de Vries equation edit The Korteweg de Vries equation u t 6 u u x u x x x displaystyle u t 6uu x u xxx nbsp can be reformulated as the Lax equation L t P L displaystyle L t P L nbsp with L x 2 u displaystyle L partial x 2 u nbsp a Sturm Liouville operator P 4 x 3 6 u x 3 u x displaystyle P 4 partial x 3 6u partial x 3u x nbsp where all derivatives act on all objects to the right This accounts for the infinite number of first integrals of the KdV equation Kovalevskaya top edit The previous example used an infinite dimensional Hilbert space Examples are also possible with finite dimensional Hilbert spaces These include Kovalevskaya top and the generalization to include an electric Field h displaystyle vec h nbsp 4 L g 1 h 2 g 2 h 1 g 3 h 3 g 2 h 1 g 1 h 2 h 3 g 3 g 3 h 3 g 1 h 2 g 2 h 1 h 3 g 3 g 2 h 1 g 1 h 2 l 1 0 0 l 2 l 1 0 0 l 1 l 2 l 2 l 1 2 l 2 l 3 l 1 l 2 2 l 3 2 l P 1 2 0 2 l 3 l 2 l 1 2 l 3 0 l 1 l 2 l 2 l 1 2 l 2 l 3 g l 1 l 2 2 l 3 2 l displaystyle begin aligned L amp begin pmatrix g 1 h 2 amp g 2 h 1 amp g 3 amp h 3 g 2 h 1 amp g 1 h 2 amp h 3 amp g 3 g 3 amp h 3 amp g 1 h 2 amp g 2 h 1 h 3 amp g 3 amp g 2 h 1 amp g 1 h 2 end pmatrix lambda 1 amp begin pmatrix 0 amp 0 amp l 2 amp l 1 0 amp 0 amp l 1 amp l 2 l 2 amp l 1 amp 2 lambda amp 2l 3 l 1 amp l 2 amp 2l 3 amp 2 lambda end pmatrix P amp frac 1 2 begin pmatrix 0 amp 2l 3 amp l 2 amp l 1 2l 3 amp 0 amp l 1 amp l 2 l 2 amp l 1 amp 2 lambda amp 2l 3 gamma l 1 amp l 2 amp 2l 3 amp 2 lambda end pmatrix end aligned nbsp Heisenberg picture edit In the Heisenberg picture of quantum mechanics an observable A without explicit time t dependence satisfiesd d t A t i ℏ H A t displaystyle frac d dt A t frac i hbar H A t nbsp with H the Hamiltonian and ħ the reduced Planck constant Aside from a factor observables without explicit time dependence in this picture can thus be seen to form Lax pairs together with the Hamiltonian The Schrodinger picture is then interpreted as the alternative expression in terms of isospectral evolution of these observables Further examples edit Further examples of systems of equations that can be formulated as a Lax pair include Benjamin Ono equation One dimensional cubic non linear Schrodinger equation Davey Stewartson system Integrable systems with contact Lax pairs 5 Kadomtsev Petviashvili equation Korteweg de Vries equation KdV hierarchy Marchenko equation Modified Korteweg de Vries equation Sine Gordon equation Toda lattice Lagrange Euler and Kovalevskaya tops Belinski Zakharov transform in general relativity The last is remarkable as it implies that both the Schwarzschild metric and the Kerr metric can be understood as solitons References edit Hitchin N J 1999 Integrable systems twistors loop groups and Riemann surfaces Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0198504217 Hitchin N J 1999 Integrable systems twistors loop groups and Riemann surfaces Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198504214 Dunajski Maciej 2010 Solitons instantons and twistors Oxford Oxford University Press pp 54 56 ISBN 978 0 19 857063 9 Bobenko A I Reyman A G Semenov Tian Shansky M A 1989 The Kowalewski top 99 years later a Lax pair generalizations and explicit solutions Communications in Mathematical Physics 122 2 321 354 Bibcode 1989CMaPh 122 321B doi 10 1007 BF01257419 ISSN 0010 3616 S2CID 121752578 A Sergyeyev New integrable 3 1 dimensional systems and contact geometry Lett Math Phys 108 2018 no 2 359 376 arXiv 1401 2122 doi 10 1007 s11005 017 1013 4 Lax P 1968 Integrals of nonlinear equations of evolution and solitary waves Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics 21 5 467 490 doi 10 1002 cpa 3160210503 archive P Lax and R S Phillips Scattering Theory for Automorphic Functions 1 1976 Princeton University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lax pair amp oldid 1149035178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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