Semiclassical asymptotics for weakly nonlinear Bloch waves (Q2507532)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 07:23, 5 March 2024 by Import240304020342 (talk | contribs) (Set profile property.)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Semiclassical asymptotics for weakly nonlinear Bloch waves
scientific article

    Statements

    Semiclassical asymptotics for weakly nonlinear Bloch waves (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    11 October 2006
    0 references
    The initial value problem is dealt with for the weakly nonlinear Schrödinger equation \[ \begin{aligned} i\varepsilon \partial_t \psi &= -\frac{\varepsilon^2}{2}\Delta \psi + V_{\Gamma}(\frac{x}{\varepsilon})\psi + U(x)\psi + \varepsilon\lambda(t)| \psi| ^{2\sigma}\psi, \quad (t,x) \in {\mathbb R}\times {\mathbb R}^d,\\ \psi| _{t=0} &= \psi_I^{\varepsilon}(x) \end{aligned} \] with a small positive parameter \(\varepsilon\), where \(\sigma\) is a positive integer. The functions \(\lambda\), \(U\) and \(V_{\Gamma}\) are all smooth and real-valued, \(U\) being sub-quadratic and \(V_{\Gamma}\) being uniformly bounded, \(\Gamma\)-periodic with respect to some lattice \(\Gamma \simeq {\mathbb Z}^d\). In \(d=3\) this equation includes, with \(\sigma =1\), \(\lambda(t) \equiv \pm 1\), the repulsive resp. attractive Gross-Pitaevskii equation, a celebrated equation connected with the Bose-Einstein condensation. The initial data \(\psi_I^{\varepsilon}\) is assumed to be of the form \[ \psi_I^{\varepsilon}(x) = a_I(x)\chi_n \biggl(\frac{x}{\varepsilon}, \nabla \phi_I(x)\biggr) e^{i\phi_I(x)/\varepsilon}+\varepsilon\varphi_I^{\varepsilon}(x). \] Here \(a_I \in {\mathcal S}({\mathbb R}^d; {\mathbb C}), \phi_I \in C^{\infty}({\mathbb R}^d; {\mathbb R})\) and \(\chi_n = \chi_n(y,k)\), \(k \in {\mathbb R}^d\), is the \textit{Bloch wave}, the eigenfunction associated to the \(n\)th eigenvalue \(E_n=E_n(k)\) of the Bloch eigenvalue problem: \([\frac12(-i\nabla_y+k)^2+V_{\Gamma}(y)-E_n(k)]\chi_n(y,k)=0\), and \(\varphi_I^{\varepsilon}\) in the remainder is a function of \(O(1)\) satisfying a certain condition. Then the authors apply the WKB method, which is effectively used with linear equations, to show that, for small \(\varepsilon\), the solution \(\psi \equiv \psi(t,x)\) is defined, up to time \(t\) before caustics appear, so as to have an approximation \(v_0^{\varepsilon} \equiv v_0^{\varepsilon}(t,x)\) with \(\psi -v_0^{\varepsilon} = O(\varepsilon)\). Although the wave function \(v_0^{\varepsilon}\) posesses the same phase \(\phi(t,x)/\varepsilon\) as in the linear case, coming from the Hamilton--Jacobi equation with the classical Hamiltonian \(h(k,x) \equiv E_n(k) +U(x)\): \(\partial_t \phi+ h_n(\nabla_x\phi,x)=0\), \(\phi| _{t=0}=\phi_I(x)\), it does an extra geometric phase \textit{modulated} in a nonlinear way.
    0 references
    nonlinear Schrödinger equation
    0 references
    WKB asymptotics
    0 references
    Bloch eigenvalue problem
    0 references
    Gross-Pitaevskii equation
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references