Asymptotic behavior of solutions of \(x''=e^{\alpha\lambda t}x^{1+\alpha}\) where \(-1<{\alpha}<0\) (Q1411271)
From MaRDI portal
| This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes. Please use this page instead for the normal view: Asymptotic behavior of solutions of \(x=e^{\alpha\lambda t}x^{1+\alpha}\) where \(-1<{\alpha}<0\) |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1997248
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Asymptotic behavior of solutions of \(x''=e^{\alpha\lambda t}x^{1+\alpha}\) where \(-1<{\alpha}<0\) |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1997248 |
Statements
Asymptotic behavior of solutions of \(x''=e^{\alpha\lambda t}x^{1+\alpha}\) where \(-1<{\alpha}<0\) (English)
0 references
27 October 2003
0 references
The paper is devoted to ordinary differential equation \[ x''=e^{\alpha\lambda t}x^{1+\alpha}. \] The main results concern the initial value problem \[ x(t_0)=a,\;x'(t_0)=b. \] The author studies the domain of definition and asymptotic expansion of solutions. His main results are formulated in two different cases given by conditions on the parameter values (Theorems I and II). Theorem I says that under appropriate conditions on the parameters, the solution is well-defined on the whole real line and in neighborhoods of \(\pm\infty\) it admits an expansion in series. The expansions at \(+\infty\) and \(-\infty\) are different in general. Moreover, in one of the cases considered in Theorem I the expansion near \(-\infty\) is given not by a series, but just by an asymptotic formula. Theorem II says that under some different conditions on the parameter values, the solution is well-defined on an interval \((\omega_-,+\infty)\), \(\omega_->-\infty\), and admits an expansion similar to the one mentioned above at each boundary point of the domain of definition (the expansion depends on the choice of the boundary point).
0 references
nonnlinear ordinary differential equation
0 references
initial value problem
0 references
asymptotic expansion
0 references