Three-Wave Equation

In nonlinear systems, the three-wave equations, sometimes called the three-wave resonant interaction equations or triad resonances, describe small-amplitude waves in a variety of non-linear media, including electrical circuits and non-linear optics.

They are a set of completely integrable nonlinear partial differential equations. Because they provide the simplest, most direct example of a resonant interaction, have broad applicability in the sciences, and are completely integrable, they have been intensively studied since the 1970s.

Informal introduction

The three-wave equation arises by consideration of some of the simplest imaginable non-linear systems. Linear differential systems have the generic form

    Three-Wave Equation 

for some differential operator D. The simplest non-linear extension of this is to write

    Three-Wave Equation 

How can one solve this? Several approaches are available. In a few exceptional cases, there might be known exact solutions to equations of this form. In general, these are found in some ad hoc fashion after applying some ansatz. A second approach is to assume that Three-Wave Equation  and use perturbation theory to find "corrections" to the linearized theory. A third approach is to apply techniques from scattering matrix (S-matrix) theory.

In the S-matrix approach, one considers particles or plane waves coming in from infinity, interacting, and then moving out to infinity. Counting from zero, the zero-particle case corresponds to the vacuum, consisting entirely of the background. The one-particle case is a wave that comes in from the distant past and then disappears into thin air; this can happen when the background is absorbing, deadening or dissipative. Alternately, a wave appears out of thin air and moves away. This occurs when the background is unstable and generates waves: one says that the system "radiates". The two-particle case consists of a particle coming in, and then going out. This is appropriate when the background is non-uniform: for example, an acoustic plane wave comes in, scatters from an enemy submarine, and then moves out to infinity; by careful analysis of the outgoing wave, characteristics of the spatial inhomogeneity can be deduced. There are two more possibilities: pair creation and pair annihilation. In this case, a pair of waves is created "out of thin air" (by interacting with some background), or disappear into thin air.

Next on this count is the three-particle interaction. It is unique, in that it does not require any interacting background or vacuum, nor is it "boring" in the sense of a non-interacting plane-wave in a homogeneous background. Writing Three-Wave Equation  for these three waves moving from/to infinity, this simplest quadratic interaction takes the form of

    Three-Wave Equation 

and cyclic permutations thereof. This generic form can be called the three-wave equation; a specific form is presented below. A key point is that all quadratic resonant interactions can be written in this form (given appropriate assumptions). For time-varying systems where Three-Wave Equation  can be interpreted as energy, one may write

    Three-Wave Equation 

for a time-dependent version.

Review

Formally, the three-wave equation is

    Three-Wave Equation 

where Three-Wave Equation  cyclic, Three-Wave Equation  is the group velocity for the wave having Three-Wave Equation  as the wave-vector and angular frequency, and Three-Wave Equation  the gradient, taken in flat Euclidean space in n dimensions. The Three-Wave Equation  are the interaction coefficients; by rescaling the wave, they can be taken Three-Wave Equation . By cyclic permutation, there are four classes of solutions. Writing Three-Wave Equation  one has Three-Wave Equation . The Three-Wave Equation  are all equivalent under permutation. In 1+1 dimensions, there are three distinct Three-Wave Equation  solutions: the Three-Wave Equation  solutions, termed explosive; the Three-Wave Equation  cases, termed stimulated backscatter, and the Three-Wave Equation  case, termed soliton exchange. These correspond to very distinct physical processes. One interesting solution is termed the simulton, it consists of three comoving solitons, moving at a velocity v that differs from any of the three group velocities Three-Wave Equation . This solution has a possible relationship to the "three sisters" observed in rogue waves, even though deep water does not have a three-wave resonant interaction.

The lecture notes by Harvey Segur provide an introduction.

The equations have a Lax pair, and are thus completely integrable. The Lax pair is a 3x3 matrix pair, to which the inverse scattering method can be applied, using techniques by Fokas. The class of spatially uniform solutions are known, these are given by Weierstrass elliptic ℘-function. The resonant interaction relations are in this case called the Manley–Rowe relations; the invariants that they describe are easily related to the modular invariants Three-Wave Equation  and Three-Wave Equation  That these appear is perhaps not entirely surprising, as there is a simple intuitive argument. Subtracting one wave-vector from the other two, one is left with two vectors that generate a period lattice. All possible relative positions of two vectors are given by Klein's j-invariant, thus one should expect solutions to be characterized by this.

A variety of exact solutions for various boundary conditions are known. A "nearly general solution" to the full non-linear PDE for the three-wave equation has recently been given. It is expressed in terms of five functions that can be freely chosen, and a Laurent series for the sixth parameter.

Applications

Some selected applications of the three-wave equations include:

    These cases are all naturally described by the three-wave equation.
  • In plasma physics, the three-wave equation describes coupling in plasmas.

References

Tags:

Three-Wave Equation Informal introductionThree-Wave Equation ReviewThree-Wave Equation ApplicationsThree-Wave EquationCompletely integrableNon-linear opticsNonlinear systemsPartial differential equationResonant interaction

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

SingaporeSenegalEkaterina AlexandrovaBob MarleyRonna McDanielTokugawa IeyasuOlivia RodrigoLamine YamalList of countries by GDP (nominal) per capitaShameless (American TV series)Abraham LincolnJimmy CarterCurb stompScarlett JohanssonBill GatesRussian invasion of UkraineVirat KohliPriscilla PresleyBBC World Service69 (sex position)Martin ScorseseBharatiya Janata PartyWes Moore50 CentJames VI and IChicago Fire (TV series)Millie Bobby BrownAnsel AdamsCarl RuizAlex SharpSunshine Skyway BridgeEdward VIIICatherine, Princess of WalesRonald ReaganJulian AssangeLeonardo DiCaprioAnne HathawayHardik PandyaSanjiv BhattRicky MartinMarch 28Windows 10 version historyEdward VIICleopatraDaniel KahnemanFlorence PughChinaGeorge WashingtonSunrisers HyderabadSeth MacFarlaneTheodore RooseveltCharlie SheenWiki FoundationCowboy CarterMonkey Man (film)Gearbox SoftwareMinecraftKillers of the Flower Moon (film)Christina ApplegateSouth AfricaJerry TrainorJohn Cena2 Girls 1 CupEuphoria (American TV series)Cassie VenturaRohan MarleyChallengers (film)WhatsAppCoco ChanelJoseph BaenaPorno y heladoNew ZealandEuropean UnionIranHTTP 404Mark WahlbergBeetlejuiceBlake LivelyJim Carrey🡆 More