J Austral Math Soc Ser B 34 pp54--80, 1992.

Boundary conditions for approximate differential equations

A. J. Roberts

(Received 14 February 1991; revised 9 August 1991)

Abstract

A large number of mathematical models are expressed as differential equations. Such models are often derived through a slowly-varying approximation under the assumption that the domain of interest is arbitrarily large; however, typical solutions and the physical problem of interest possess finite domains. The issue is: what are the correct boundary conditions to be used at the edge of the domain for such model equations? Centre manifold theory [24] and its generalisations may be used to derive these sorts of approximations, and higher-order refinements, in an appealing and systematic fashion. Furthermore, the centre manifold approach permits the derivation of appropriate initial conditions and forcing for the models [25, 7]. Here I show how to derive asymptotically-correct boundary conditions for models which are based on the slowly-varying approximation. The dominant terms in the boundary conditions typically agree with those obtained through physical arguments. However, refined models of higher order require subtle corrections to the previously-deduced boundary conditions, and also require the provision of additional boundary conditions to form a complete model.

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Author

A. J. Roberts
Department of Applied Mathematics, The University of Adelaide, GPO Box 498, Adelaide 5001, South Australia.

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Last Modified: Mon Jan 7 16:35:24 2002

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