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For a proper authoritative definition of ``well posed'' in the field
of finite-difference schemes, see, e.g., [484]. The
definition we will use here is less general in that it excludes
amplitude growth from initial conditions which is faster than
polynomial in time.
We will say that an initial-value problem is
well posed
if the linear system defined by the PDE, together with any bounded initial
conditions is marginally stable.
As discussed in [452], a system is defined to be
stable when its response to bounded initial
conditions approaches zero as time goes to infinity. If the response
fails to approach zero but does not exponentially grow over time (the
lossless case), it is called marginally stable.
In the literature on finite-difference schemes, lossless systems are
classified as stable [484]. However, in this book series,
lossless systems are not considered stable, but only marginally
stable.
When marginally stable systems are allowed, it is necessary to
accommodate
polynomial growth with respect to time. As is well known
in linear systems theory, repeated poles can yield polynomial growth
[452]. A very simple example is the ordinary differential
equation (ODE)
which, given the initial condition
, has solutions
for any constant
. Thus, the system is lossless and the initial
condition is finite, yet solution is not bounded. Similarly,
solutions to the ODE
can grow as
, and so on.
When all poles of the system are strictly in the left-half of the
Laplace-transform
plane, the system is stable, even when
the poles are repeated. This is because exponentials are faster than
polynomials, so that any amount of exponential decay will eventually
overtake polynomial growth and drag it to zero in the limit.
Marginally stable systems arise often in computational physical
modeling. In particular, the ideal string is only marginally stable,
since it is lossless. Even a simple unaccelerated mass, sliding on a
frictionless surface, is described by a marginally stable PDE when the
position of the mass is used as a state variable (see
§7.1.2). Given any nonzero initial velocity, the position
of the mass approaches either
or
infinity, exactly as in the
example above. To avoid unbounded growth in practical
systems, it is often preferable to avoid the use of displacement as a
state variable. For ideal strings and freely sliding masses, force
and velocity are usually good choices.
It should perhaps be emphasized that the term ``well posed'' normally
allows for more general energy growth at a rate which can be bounded
over all initial conditions [484]. In this book, however,
the ``marginally stable'' case (at most polynomial growth) is what we
need. The reason is simply that we wish to excluded unstable PDEs as
a modeling target. Note, however, that unstable systems can be used
profitable over carefully limited time durations (see §9.7.2
for an example).
In the ideal vibrating string, energy is conserved. Therefore, it is a
marginally stable system. To show mathematically that the PDE
Eq.(D.2) is marginally stable, we may show that
for some constants
and
. I.e., we can show
for all
.
Note that solutions on the ideal string are not bounded, since, for
example, an infinitely long string (non-terminated) can be initialized
with a constant positive velocity everywhere along its length. This
corresponds physically to a nonzero transverse momentum, which is
conserved. Therefore, the string will depart in the positive
direction, with an average displacement that grows linearly with
.
The well-posedness of a class of damped PDEs used in string modeling
is analyzed in §D.2.2.
Subsections
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