Search results for "Toda lattice"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Numerical study of the long wavelength limit of the Toda lattice

2014

We present the first detailed numerical study of the Toda equations in $2+1$ dimensions in the limit of long wavelengths, both for the hyperbolic and elliptic case. We first study the formal dispersionless limit of the Toda equations and solve initial value problems for the resulting system up to the point of gradient catastrophe. It is shown that the break-up of the solution in the hyperbolic case is similar to the shock formation in the Hopf equation, a $1+1$ dimensional singularity. In the elliptic case, it is found that the break-up is given by a cusp as for the semiclassical system of the focusing nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation in $1+1$ dimensions. The full Toda system is then studie…

Nonlinear Sciences - Exactly Solvable and Integrable SystemsLong wavelength limitApplied MathematicsFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomySemiclassical physicsStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsMathematical Physics (math-ph)Schrödinger equationNonlinear systemsymbols.namesakeNonlinear Sciences::Exactly Solvable and Integrable SystemsSingular solutionsymbolsInitial value problemExactly Solvable and Integrable Systems (nlin.SI)Toda latticeNonlinear Schrödinger equationMathematical PhysicsMathematicsMathematical physicsNonlinearity
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Quantum and Classical Statistical Mechanics of the Integrable Models in 1 + 1 Dimensions

1990

In a short but remarkable paper Yang and Yang [1] showed that the free energy of a model system consisting of N bosons on a line with repulsive δ-function interactions was given by a set of coupled integral equations. The Yangs’ chosen model is in fact the repulsive version of the quantum Nonlinear Schrodinger (NLS) model. We have shown that with appropriate extensions and different dispersion relations and phase shifts similar formulae apply to ‘all’ of the integrable models quantum or classical. These models include the sine-Gordon (s-G) and sinh-Gordon (sinh-G) models, the two NLS models (attractive and repulsive), the Landau-Lifshitz (L-L’) model which includes all four previous models,…

Nonlinear Sciences::Exactly Solvable and Integrable SystemsMethod of quantum characteristicsStatistical mechanicsQuantum inverse scattering methodToda latticeQuantum statistical mechanicsClassical limitQuantum chaosMathematical physicsMathematicsBethe ansatz
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Thermodynamics of Toda lattice models: application to DNA

1993

Abstract Our generalised Bethe ansatz method is used to formulate the statistical mechanics of the classical Toda lattice in terms of a set of coupled integral equations expressed in terms of appropriate action-angle variables. The phase space as coordinatised by these action-angle variables is constrained; and both the soliton number density and the soliton contribution to the free energy density can be shown to decouple from the phonon degrees of freedom and to depend only on soliton-soliton interactions. This makes it possible to evaluate the temperature dependence of the soliton number density which, to leading order, is found to be proportional to T 1 3 .

Number densityDegrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)Statistical and Nonlinear PhysicsStatistical mechanicsCondensed Matter PhysicsBethe ansatzNonlinear Sciences::Exactly Solvable and Integrable SystemsPhase spaceSolitonPerturbation theory (quantum mechanics)Toda latticeNonlinear Sciences::Pattern Formation and SolitonsMathematicsMathematical physicsPhysica D: Nonlinear Phenomena
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More on Transmission-Line Solitons

1996

The study of solitons on discrete lattices dates back to the early days of soliton theory (Frenkel and Kontorova 1939, Fermi et al. 1955) and is of great physical importance. Generally, the discrete nonlinear equations which model these lattices cannot be solved analytically. Consequently, one looks for possible pulse-soliton solutions in the continuum or long wavelength approximation, that is, solitons with a width much larger than the electrical length of a unit section of the electrical network, as described in Chap.3. When this approach is not workable, one has to use numerical approaches (Zabusky 1973, Eilbeck 1991) or simulations. Nevertheless, there exist some lattice models for whic…

PhysicsModulational instabilityNonlinear systemClassical mechanicsSpin wavelawElectrical networkLattice (order)SolitonToda latticeExponential functionlaw.invention
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Nonlinear Evolution Equations, Quasi-Solitons and their Experimental Manifestation

1990

We review the typical experimental facts which characterize quasisolitons in one-dimensional real systems, in connection with their modeling by nonlinear partial differential equations.We consider these nonlinear waves or excitations in two different domains of the real world : the macroworld and the microworld. In the macroworld we examine typical one-dimensional devices : the electrical networks, the Josephson transmission lines and the optical fibers, where the localized waves or pulses can be simply and coherently created, easily observed and manipulated on a macroscopic scale. In the microworld, we consider the magnetic chains and polymers, where the indirect experimental signatures of…

PhysicsNonlinear systemElectric power transmissionClassical mechanicsField (physics)Transmission lineMacroscopic scaleConnection (vector bundle)Partial derivativeToda lattice
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