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Modulated waves in a semiclassical continuum limit of an integrable NLS chain
Author(s) -
Shipman Stephen P.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
communications on pure and applied mathematics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.12
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1097-0312
pISSN - 0010-3640
DOI - 10.1002/(sici)1097-0312(200002)53:2<243::aid-cpa3>3.0.co;2-4
Subject(s) - mathematics , semiclassical physics , integrable system , scalar (mathematics) , hilbert space , mathematical analysis , wkb approximation , lattice (music) , phase space , mathematical physics , pure mathematics , quantum mechanics , physics , quantum , geometry , acoustics
A one‐dimensional integrable lattice system of ODEs for complex functions Q n (τ) that exhibits dispersive phenomena in the phase is studied. We consider wave solutions of the local form Q n (τ) ∼ q exp( i ( kn + ωτ + c )), in which q, k , and ω modulate on long time and long space scales t = ετ and x = ε n . Such solutions arise from initial data of the form Q n (0) = q ( n ε) exp( i ϕ( n ε)/ε), the phase derivative ϕ′ 0 giving the local value of the phase difference k . Formal asymptotic analysis as ε → 0 yields a first‐order system of PDEs for q and ϕ′ as functions of x and t . A certain finite subchain of the discrete system is solvable by an inverse spectral transform. We propose formulae for the asymptotic spectral data and use them to study the limiting behavior of the solution in the case of initial data | Q n | < 1, which yield hyperbolic PDEs in the formal limit. We show that the hyperbolic case is amenable to Lax‐Levermore theory. The associated maximization problem in the spectral domain is solved by means of a scalar Riemann‐Hilbert problem for a special class of data for all times before breaking of the formal PDEs. Under certain assumptions on asymptotic behaviors, the phase and amplitude modulation of the discrete systems is shown to be governed by the formal PDEs. Modulation equations after breaking time are not studied. Full details of the WKB theory and numerical results are left to a future exposition. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.