Orbital stability

Orbital stability

In mathematical physics or theory of partial differential equations, the solitary wave solution of the form u(x,t)=e^{-i\omega t}\phi(x)\, is said to be orbitally stable if any solution with the initial data sufficiently close to \phi(x)\, forever remains in a given small neighborhood of the trajectory of e^{-i\omega t}\phi(x)\,.

Contents

Formal definition

Formal definition is as follows[1]. Let us consider the dynamical system


\frac{du}{dt}=A(u),
\qquad
u(t)\in X,
\quad t\in\R,

with X\, a Banach space over \C\,, and A\,:X\to X. We assume that the system is -invariant, so that A(e^{is}u)=e^{is}A(u)\, for any u\in X\, and any s\in\R\,.

Assume that \omega \phi=A(\phi)\,, so that u(t)=e^{-i\omega t}\phi\, is a solution to the dynamical system. We call such solution a solitary wave.

We say that the solitary wave e^{-i\omega t}\phi\, is orbitally stable if for any \epsilon>0\, there is \delta>0\, such that for any v_0\in X with \Vert \phi-v_0\Vert_X<\delta\, there is a solution v(t)\, defined for all t\ge 0 such that v(0)=v_0\,, and such that this solution satisfies


\sup_{t\ge 0}\inf_{s\in\R}\Vert v(t)-e^{is}\phi\Vert_X<\epsilon.

Example

The solitary wave solution e^{-i\omega t}\phi_\omega(x)\, to the nonlinear Schrödinger equation


i\frac{\partial}{\partial t}u=-\frac{\partial^2}{\partial x\,^2}u+g(|u|^2)u,
\qquad
u(x,t)\in\C,\quad x\in\R,\quad t\in\R,

where g\, is a smooth real-valued function, is orbitally stable if the Vakhitov–Kolokolov stability criterion is satisfied:

\frac{d}{d\omega}Q(\phi_\omega)<0,

where

Q(u)=\frac{1}{2}\int_{\R}|u(x,t)|^2\,dx

is the charge of the solution u(x,t)\,, which is conserved in time (at least if the solution u(x,t)\, is sufficiently smooth).

It was also shown [2] that if \frac{d}{d\omega}Q(\omega)<0 at a particular value of \omega\,, then the solitary wave e^{-i\omega t}\phi_\omega(x)\, is Lyapunov stable, with the Lyapunov function given by L(u)=E(u)-\omega Q(u)+\Gamma(Q(u)-Q(\phi_\omega))^2\,, where E(u)=\frac{1}{2}\int_{\R}\left(|\frac{\partial u}{\partial x}|^2+G(|u|^2)\right)\,dx is the energy of a solution u(x,t)\,, with G(y)=\int_0^y g(z)\,dz the antiderivative of g\,, as long as the constant \Gamma>0\, is chosen sufficienty large.

See also

References

  1. ^ Manoussos Grillakis, Jalal Shatah, Walter Strauss, Stability theory of solitary waves in the presence of symmetry. I, J. Funct. Anal. 74 (1987), pp. 160--197.
  2. ^ Richard Jordan and Bruce Turkington, Statistical equilibrium theories for the nonlinear Schrödinger equation, Advances in wave interaction and turbulence (South Hadley, MA, 2000), Contemp. Math. 283 (2001), pp. 27–39.

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