Integrable (3 + 1)-Dimensional Generalization for the Dispersionless Davey–Stewartson System
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6489796
DOI10.1007/S12346-024-01009-9MaRDI QIDQ6489796
Publication date: 22 April 2024
Published in: Qualitative Theory of Dynamical Systems (Search for Journal in Brave)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Hamiltonian systems of hydrodynamic type in \(2+1\) dimensions
- A dressing method in mathematical physics.
- Searching for integrability
- On the Davey-Stewartson systems
- Integrable \((3+1)\)-dimensional systems with rational Lax pairs
- The symbolic computation of integrability structures for partial differential equations
- New integrable (\(3+1\))-dimensional systems and contact geometry
- Integrable \((3 + 1)\)-dimensional system with an algebraic Lax pair
- The semi-classical limit of Davey-Stewartson hierarchy
- On the dispersionless Davey-Stewartson system: Hamiltonian vector field Lax pair and relevant nonlinear Riemann-Hilbert problem for dDS-II system
- Bäcklund transformations, symmetry reductions and exact solutions of (2+1)-dimensional nonlocal DS equations
- Variable separation solution for an extended (3+1)-dimensional Boiti-Leon-Manna-Pempinelli equation
- On the Einstein-Weyl and conformal self-duality equations
- Localized coherent structures of the Davey–Stewartson equation in the bilinear formalism
- Dispersionless scalar integrable hierarchies, Whitham hierarchy, and the quasiclassical ∂̄-dressing method
- General soliton solutions to a reverse‐time nonlocal nonlinear Schrödinger equation
- Riemannian geometry of contact and symplectic manifolds
- Ultra-short optical pulses in a birefringent fiber via a generalized coupled Hirota system with the singular manifold and symbolic computation
- On the dispersionless Davey–Stewartson hierarchy: Zakharov–Shabat equations, twistor structure, and Lax–Sato formalism
This page was built for publication: Integrable (3 + 1)-Dimensional Generalization for the Dispersionless Davey–Stewartson System