power series solutions for ordinary differential equations - references - MathOverflow most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-05-24T21:49:32Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/40403 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/40403/power-series-solutions-for-ordinary-differential-equations-references power series solutions for ordinary differential equations - references aukm 2010-09-29T02:16:35Z 2010-10-09T00:19:49Z <p>Hello </p> <p>I'm having a hard time finding some references on series solutions for "nonlinear" ODE's, the most I could find was a small excert on wikipedia. </p> <p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_series_solution_of_differential_equations" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_series_solution_of_differential_equations</a></p> <p>Most books just say something along the lines of ... and the method is applicable to nonlinear ODE's. But none i've seen go into detail let alone an example. Can anyone suggest me a good book or reference (in particular for 2nd order nonlinear ODEs)?</p> <p>Thanks </p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/40403/power-series-solutions-for-ordinary-differential-equations-references/41544#41544 Answer by mathphysicist for power series solutions for ordinary differential equations - references mathphysicist 2010-10-08T22:28:03Z 2010-10-08T22:28:03Z <p>I have found another nonlinear example at sosmath.com <a href="http://www.sosmath.com/CBB/viewtopic.php?p=176220" rel="nofollow">here</a> but it appears to contain mistakes. </p> <p>Also you can play with the examples of power series solutions in <a href="http://www.maplesoft.com/" rel="nofollow">Maple</a> using <strong>dsolve</strong> with the <strong>series</strong> option.</p> <p>Some further examples could probably be found in connection with the study of the Painleve property and the <a href="http://eom.springer.de/P/p110030.htm" rel="nofollow">Painleve test</a> of integrability for (systems of) ODEs, see e.g. the book <em>Integrability and Nonintegrability of of dynamical systems</em> (full text available at <a href="http://math.arizona.edu/~goriely/pubB.html" rel="nofollow">this URL</a>) by Alain Goriely and references therein. </p> <p>Another useful keyword to search for is <em>formal solution</em> instead of the <em>power series solution</em>, although the convergence will probably not be discussed in the context of formal solutions.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/40403/power-series-solutions-for-ordinary-differential-equations-references/41549#41549 Answer by Andrew L for power series solutions for ordinary differential equations - references Andrew L 2010-10-08T23:35:11Z 2010-10-08T23:35:11Z <p>Nonlinear differential equations is hard to find good references on-partly due to the difficulty of the subject and partly due to the highly specialized nature of most of the research problems connected with them. But a lot of these problems are really problems of numerical approximation-so I think you'll have greater luck if you begin searching the literature on THAT,math. </p> <p>A very good book to start with that has a lot of great material on this is Atkinson and Kan's <em>Theoretical Numerical Analysis</em>. Not only is it terrifically written and comprehensive with lots of examples,it's one of the most scholarly texts I've ever seen with <strong>complete and opiniated</strong> references. I think you'll find this book's references will give you a great deal of direction for further study on nonlinear solution of ODE's. </p> <p>An older book that has a lot of nice material on power series and other numerical methods for ODE's is Einar Hille's <em>Lectures On Ordinary Differential Equations</em>. Why most of Hille's texts-which are all wonderful-are out of print mystifies me. </p> <p>That should help you get started,especially the Atkinson/Han book. Good hunting! </p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/40403/power-series-solutions-for-ordinary-differential-equations-references/41552#41552 Answer by jc for power series solutions for ordinary differential equations - references jc 2010-10-09T00:19:49Z 2010-10-09T00:19:49Z <p>I recommend the book of Bender and Orszag "Advanced mathematical methods for scientists and engineers". The first chapter is a whirlwind review of "exact methods for ODE" which includes Frobenius series and other standard tricks, and has a section on <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=-yQXwhE6iWMC&amp;lpg=PP1&amp;ots=NanXRAgFbk&amp;dq=bender%20orszag&amp;pg=PA20#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false" rel="nofollow">techniques specific to nonlinear ODE</a>. The rest of the book describes perturbation theory and other approximation techniques which are more broadly applicable in practice and in my opinion often more "physically" enlightening (that is, often providing useful reasons "why" solutions to an equation behave the way they do).</p>