A continuation principle for forced oscillations on differentiable manifolds (Q759889): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Set OpenAlex properties. |
Normalize DOI. |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Property / DOI | |||
Property / DOI: 10.2140/pjm.1986.121.321 / rank | |||
Property / DOI | |||
Property / DOI: 10.2140/PJM.1986.121.321 / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Latest revision as of 03:06, 10 December 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | A continuation principle for forced oscillations on differentiable manifolds |
scientific article |
Statements
A continuation principle for forced oscillations on differentiable manifolds (English)
0 references
1986
0 references
The paper is concerned with the existence of T-periodic solutions of the differential equation \(\dot x(\)t)\(=f(t,x(t))\), \(t\in {\mathbb{R}}\), where f is a continuous time dependent T-periodic tangent vector field defined on an n-dimensional differentiable manifold M possibly with boundary. It is proved that if the Euler characteristic of the average vector field \(w(p)=(1/T)\int^{T}_{0}f(t,p)dt\) is defined and nonzero and if all the possible orbits of the parametrized equation \(\dot x(\)t)\(=\lambda f(t,x(t))\), \(t\in {\mathbb{R}}\) and \(\lambda\in (0,1]\) lie in a compact set and do not hit the boundary of M, then the given equation admits a T- periodic solution. This ''continuation principle'' unifies in a global setting many well-known and apparently not related results such as, for instance, the Poincaré-Hopf theorem, a classical Krasnosel'skij's existence result, Mawhin's continuation principle on forced oscillations.
0 references
fixed point index
0 references
connected branches
0 references
tangent vector field
0 references
n- dimensional differentiable manifold
0 references
Euler characteristic
0 references
continuation principle
0 references
Poincaré-Hopf theorem
0 references
Krasnosel'skij existence result
0 references
Mawhin continuation principle
0 references
forced oscillations
0 references