Burgers' equation
Burgers' equation or Bateman–Burgers equation is a fundamental partial differential equation occurring in various areas of applied mathematics, such as fluid mechanics,[1] nonlinear acoustics,[2] gas dynamics, and traffic flow. The equation was first introduced by Harry Bateman in 1915[3][4] and later studied by Johannes Martinus Burgers in 1948.[5]
For a given field and diffusion coefficient (or kinematic viscosity, as in the original fluid mechanical context) , the general form of Burgers' equation (also known as viscous Burgers' equation) in one space dimension is the dissipative system:
When the diffusion term is absent (i.e. ), Burgers' equation becomes the inviscid Burgers' equation:
Explanation of Terms[]
There are 4 parameters in Burgers' equation: and . In a system consisting of a moving viscous fluid with one spatial () and one temporal () dimension, e.g. a thin ideal pipe with fluid running through it, Burgers' equation describes the speed of the fluid at each location along the pipe as time progresses. The terms of the equation represent the following quantities:[6]
- : spatial coordinate
- : temporal coordinate
- : speed of fluid at the indicated spatial and temporal coordinates
- : viscosity of fluid
The viscosity is a constant physical property of the fluid, and the other parameters represent the dynamics contingent on that viscosity.
Inviscid Burgers' equation[]
The inviscid Burgers' equation is a conservation equation, more generally a first order quasilinear hyperbolic equation. The solution to the equation and along with the initial condition
Integration of the second equation tells us that is constant along the characteristic and integration of the first equation shows that the characteristics are straight lines, i.e.,
Thus, the solution is given by
This is an implicit relation that determines the solution of the inviscid Burgers' equation provided characteristics don't intersect. If the characteristics do intersect, then a classical solution to the PDE does not exist and leads to the formation of a shock wave. In fact, the breaking time before a shock wave can be formed is given by[7]
Inviscid Burgers' equation for linear initial condition[]
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar provided the explicit solution in 1943 when the initial condition is linear, i.e., , where a and b are constants.[8] The explicit solution is
This solution is also the complete integral of the inviscid Burgers' equation because it contains as many arbitrary constants as the number of independent variables appearing in the equation.[9][better source needed] Using this complete integral, Chandrasekhar obtained the general solution described for arbitrary initial conditions from the envelope of the complete integral.
Viscous Burgers' equation[]
The viscous Burgers' equation can be converted to a linear equation by the ,[10][11][12]
The diffusion equation can be solved, and the Cole–Hopf transformation inverted, to obtain the solution to the Burgers' equation:
Other forms[]
Generalized Burgers' equation[]
The generalized Burgers' equation extends the quasilinear convective to more generalized form, i.e.,
Stochastic Burgers' equation[]
Added space-time noise , where is an Wiener process, forms a stochastic Burgers' equation[14]
This stochastic PDE is the one-dimensional version of Kardar–Parisi–Zhang equation in a field upon substituting .
See also[]
References[]
- ^ It relates to the Navier–Stokes momentum equation with the pressure term removed Burgers Equation (PDF): here the variable is the flow speed y=u
- ^ It arises from with an assumption of strictly forward propagating waves and the use of a coordinate transformation to a retarded time frame: here the variable is the pressure
- ^ Bateman, H. (1915). "Some recent researches on the motion of fluids". Monthly Weather Review. 43 (4): 163–170. doi:10.1175/1520-0493(1915)43<163:SRROTM>2.0.CO;2.
- ^ Whitham, G. B. (2011). Linear and nonlinear waves (Vol. 42). John Wiley & Sons.
- ^ Burgers, J. M. (1948). "A Mathematical Model Illustrating the Theory of Turbulence". Advances in Applied Mechanics. 1: 171–199. doi:10.1016/S0065-2156(08)70100-5.
- ^ Cameron, Maria. "Notes on Burgers's Equation" (PDF).
- ^ Olver, Peter J. (2013). Introduction to Partial Differential Equations. Online: Springer. p. 37. ISBN 978-3-319-02098-3.
- ^ Chandrasekhar, S. (1943). On the decay of plane shock waves (Report). Ballistic Research Laboratories. Report No. 423.
- ^ Forsyth, A. R. (1903). A Treatise on Differential Equations. London: Macmillan.
- ^ Cole, Julian (1951). "On a quasi-linear parabolic equation occurring in aerodynamics". Quarterly of Applied Mathematics. 9 (3): 225–236. JSTOR 43633894.
- ^ Eberhard Hopf (September 1950). "The partial differential equation ut + uux = μuxx". Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics. 3 (3): 201–230. doi:10.1002/cpa.3160030302.
- ^ Kevorkian, J. (1990). Partial Differential Equations: Analytical Solution Techniques. Belmont: Wadsworth. pp. 31–35. ISBN 0-534-12216-7.
- ^ Courant, R., & Hilbert, D. Methods of Mathematical Physics. Vol. II.
- ^ Wang, W.; Roberts, A. J. (2015). "Diffusion Approximation for Self-similarity of Stochastic Advection in Burgers' Equation". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 333: 1287–1316. arXiv:1203.0463. doi:10.1007/s00220-014-2117-7.
External links[]
- Burgers' Equation at EqWorld: The World of Mathematical Equations.
- Burgers' Equation at NEQwiki, the nonlinear equations encyclopedia.
- Conservation equations
- Equations of fluid dynamics
- Fluid dynamics