Timeline for Definitions of weak solutions for quasilinear wave equations
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
7 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Apr 19 at 4:33 | comment | added | Daniele Tampieri | @lsb good luck: maybe theres's a library near where you live that can borrow it. | |
Apr 19 at 2:13 | vote | accept | lsb | ||
Apr 19 at 2:13 | comment | added | lsb | @DanieleTampieri Thanks for this reference. I am trying to find one copy now:D | |
Apr 19 at 2:06 | comment | added | lsb | @WillieWong Thanks a lot for this great answer. I still have some confusions, but this do help me clarify several issues! | |
Apr 17 at 20:35 | comment | added | Daniele Tampieri | @lsb an addition to the nice answer by Willie. The Rankine-Hugoniot condition is also called Rankine-Hugoniot-Hadamard-Duhem conditioni in the context of continuum mechanics where nonlinearity Is the rule. You may find interesting to have a look to Witold Kosiński's monograph, Field singularities and wave analysis in continuum mechanics, Ellis Horwood Series Mathematics and its Applications, pp. 251 (1986), MR872699, Zbl 0622.73032: be it noted that he works, when possible, in $BV$ and $BV_\text{loc}$ | |
Apr 17 at 11:09 | comment | added | Willie Wong | Your earlier comments reminded me of a conversation I had with my former student Leo Abbrescia where he explained to me basically what I wrote. If you want specific references, maybe you can email him. | |
Apr 17 at 11:06 | history | answered | Willie Wong | CC BY-SA 4.0 |