Breather
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A breather is a nonlinear wave phenomenon in which energy concentrates in a localized and oscillatory fashion[1]. This contradicts with the expectations derived from the corresponding linear system for infinitesimal amplitudes, which tends towards an even distribution of initially localized energy.
A discrete breather is a breather solution on a nonlinear lattice.
The term breather originates from the characteristic that most breathers are localized in space and oscillate (breath) in time[2]. But also the opposite situation: oscillations in space and localized in time, is denoted as a breather.
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[edit] Overview
A breather is a localized periodic solution of either continuous media equations or discrete lattice equations. The exactly solvable sine-Gordon equation[2] and the focusing nonlinear Schrödinger equation[3] are examples of one-dimensional partial differential equations that possess breather solutions[4]. Discrete nonlinear Hamiltonian lattices in many cases support breather solutions.
Breathers are solitonic structures. There are two types of breathers: standing or traveling ones[5]. Standing breathers correspond to localized solutions whose amplitude vary in time (they are sometimes called oscillons). A necessary condition for the existence of breathers in discrete lattices is that the breather main frequency and all its multipliers are located outside of the phonon spectrum of the lattice.
[edit] Example of a breather solution for the sine-Gordon equation
The sine-Gordon equation is the nonlinear dispersive partial differential equation
with the field u a function of the spatial coordinate x and time t.
An exact solution found by using the inverse scattering transform is[2]:
which, for ω < 1, is periodic in time t and decays exponentially when moving away from x = 0.
[edit] Example of a breather solution for the nonlinear Schrödinger equation
The focusing nonlinear Schrödinger equation[6] is the dispersive partial differential equation:
with u a complex field as a function of x and t. Further i denotes the imaginary unit.
One of the breather solutions is[3]
which gives breathers periodic in space x and approaching the uniform value a when moving away from the focus time t = 0. These breathers exist for values of the modulation parameter b less than √ 2.
[edit] See also
[edit] References and notes
- ^ David Byrne: New Science Terms
- ^ a b c M. J. Ablowitz; D. J. Kaup ; A. C. Newell ; H. Segur (1973). "Method for solving the sine-Gordon equation". Physical Review Letters 30: 1262–1264. doi: .
- ^ a b N. N. Akhmediev; V. M. Eleonskiǐ; N. E. Kulagin (1987). "First-order exact solutions of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation". Theoretical and Mathematical Physics 72: 809–818. doi: . Translated from Teoreticheskaya i Matematicheskaya Fizika 72(2): 183–196, August, 1987.
- ^ N. N. Akhmediev; A. Ankiewicz (1997). Solitons, non-linear pulses and beams. Springer. ISBN 978-0-412-75450-0.
- ^ Miroshnichenko A, Vasiliev A, Dmitriev S. Solitons and Soliton Collisions.
- ^ The focusing nonlinear Schrödinger equation has a nonlinearity parameter κ of the same sign (mathematics) as the dispersive term proportional to ∂2u/∂x2, and has soliton solutions. In the de-focusing nonlinear Schrödinger equation the nonlinearity parameter is of opposite sign.