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Local Existence and Uniqueness of Spatially Quasi-Periodic Solutions to the Generalized KdV Equation

David Damanik, Yong Li, Fei Xu

Abstract

In this paper, we study the existence and uniqueness of spatially quasi-periodic solutions to the generalized KdV equation (gKdV for short) on the real line with quasi-periodic initial data whose Fourier coefficients are exponentially decaying. In order to solve for the Fourier coefficients of the solution, we first reduce the nonlinear dispersive partial differential equation to a nonlinear infinite system of coupled ordinary differential equations, and then construct the Picard sequence to approximate them. However, we meet, and have to deal with, the difficulty of studying {\bf the higher dimensional discrete convolution operation for several functions}: \[\underbrace{c\times\cdots\times c}_{\mathfrak p~\text{times}}~(\text{total distance}):=\sum_{\substack{\clubsuit_1,\cdots,\clubsuit_{\mathfrak p}\in\mathbb Z^ν\\ \clubsuit_1+\cdots+\clubsuit_{\mathfrak p}=~\text{total distance}}}\prod_{j=1}^{\mathfrak p}c(\clubsuit_j).\] In order to overcome it, we apply a combinatorial method to reformulate the Picard sequence as a tree. Based on this form, we prove that the Picard sequence is exponentially decaying and fundamental ({\color{red}i.e., a} Cauchy sequence). We first give a detailed discussion of the proof of the existence and uniqueness result in the case $\mathfrak p=3$. Next, we prove existence and uniqueness in the general case $\mathfrak p\geq 2$, which then covers the remaining cases $\mathfrak p\geq 4$. As a byproduct, we recover the local result from \cite{damanik16}. We exhibit the most important combinatorial index $σ$ and obtain a relationship with other indices, which is essential to our proofs in the case of general $\mathfrak p$.

Local Existence and Uniqueness of Spatially Quasi-Periodic Solutions to the Generalized KdV Equation

Abstract

In this paper, we study the existence and uniqueness of spatially quasi-periodic solutions to the generalized KdV equation (gKdV for short) on the real line with quasi-periodic initial data whose Fourier coefficients are exponentially decaying. In order to solve for the Fourier coefficients of the solution, we first reduce the nonlinear dispersive partial differential equation to a nonlinear infinite system of coupled ordinary differential equations, and then construct the Picard sequence to approximate them. However, we meet, and have to deal with, the difficulty of studying {\bf the higher dimensional discrete convolution operation for several functions}: In order to overcome it, we apply a combinatorial method to reformulate the Picard sequence as a tree. Based on this form, we prove that the Picard sequence is exponentially decaying and fundamental ({\color{red}i.e., a} Cauchy sequence). We first give a detailed discussion of the proof of the existence and uniqueness result in the case . Next, we prove existence and uniqueness in the general case , which then covers the remaining cases . As a byproduct, we recover the local result from \cite{damanik16}. We exhibit the most important combinatorial index and obtain a relationship with other indices, which is essential to our proofs in the case of general .

Paper Structure

This paper contains 28 sections, 32 theorems, 203 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1

If the Fourier coefficients $\{c(n)\}$ of $u_0$ are exponentially decaying, that is, there exist $\mathcal{A}>0$ and $0<\kappa\leq1$ such that and the wave vector $\omega\in\mathbb R^\nu$ is rationally independent or non-resonant, then there exists a positive number such that there exists a spatially $\omega$-quasi-periodic function that solves $\mathfrak p$-gKdV ppkdv, satisfies the initial co

Theorems & Definitions (82)

  • Theorem 1: Existence
  • Theorem 2: Uniqueness
  • Remark 3
  • Theorem 4: Convergence
  • proof
  • Remark 5
  • Proposition 2.1
  • Lemma 2.2
  • proof
  • Remark 2.3
  • ...and 72 more