Kreĭn's method and Volterra-Fredholm integral equation (Q2907745)
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: Kreĭn's method and Volterra-Fredholm integral equation |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6080606
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Kreĭn's method and Volterra-Fredholm integral equation |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6080606 |
Statements
11 September 2012
0 references
Volterra-Fredholm integral equation
0 references
Kreĭn's method
0 references
contact problems
0 references
spectral relationships
0 references
Chebyshev polynomials
0 references
numerical method
0 references
system of linear Fredholm integral equation
0 references
discontinuous kernel
0 references
continuous kernel
0 references
0 references
0.90048087
0 references
0.90048087
0 references
0.90016675
0 references
0.8974706
0 references
Kreĭn's method and Volterra-Fredholm integral equation (English)
0 references
The solution of integral equations can be obtained analytically using one of the following methods: the Cauchy method, the potential theory method, orthogonal polynomials methods, integral transformation methods and Krein's method. The authors use a numerical method to transform the Volterra-Fredholm integral equation (V-FIE) into a system of linear Fredholm integral equations (SFIEs) of the first kind and obtain the solution of SFIEs. In fact, the authors summarize the content of this paper as follows: The existence of a unique solution of the Volterra-Fredholm integral equation of the first kind is considered in the space \(L_2[-1,1]\times C(0,T)\). The Fredholm integral term is considered in position with discontinuous kernel, while the Volterra integral term is considered in time with continuous kernel. Using a numerical method, we have a system of SFIEs of the first kind. Using Krein's method, the solution of SFIEs is obtained in the form of spectral relationships. Finally, many special cases and applications in fluid mechanics and contact problems are discussed.
0 references