Bifurcation, symmetry, and cosymmetry in differential equations unresolved with respect to the derivative with variational branching equations (Q845155)

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Bifurcation, symmetry, and cosymmetry in differential equations unresolved with respect to the derivative with variational branching equations
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    Bifurcation, symmetry, and cosymmetry in differential equations unresolved with respect to the derivative with variational branching equations (English)
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    5 February 2010
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    The authors consider first order autonomous differential equations in real Banach spaces, not necessarily resolved in terms of the derivative; that is, they consider \(u \in E_1\) and, for \(p = d u / dt \in T E_1\) and \(\varepsilon \in R\) a perturbation parameter, an equation of the general form \(F(p,x,\varepsilon) = 0\), with \(F : T E_1 \times E_1 \times R \to E_2\). Moreover, \(x_0\) is a solution for all \(\varepsilon\), \(F(0,x_0,\varepsilon) = 0\). They assume \(F\) is smooth, and that \(A := (\partial F / \partial p) (0,x_0,0)\) and \(B = - (\partial F / \partial x) (0,x_0,0) \) are Fredholm operators. Thus the equation can be written, in a vicinity of \(x_{0}\), as \[ A \;dx/dt \;= \;B \;(x-x_0) \;- \;R ( x_0 , dx/dt,x-x_0,\varepsilon), \] where of course \( R ( x_0 , dx/dt,x-x_0,\varepsilon) = F (p,x,\varepsilon) ' A p + B (x-x_0)\). Finally, they make bifurcation assumptions, i.e. that the spectrum of the operator \(B\) decomposes into a part strictly contained in the left half complex plane and two eigenvalues \(\pm i \alpha\) of multiplicity \(n\) which cross the imaginary axis. Under these assumptions, the authors study the branching equation (obtained via a Lyapounov-Schmidt reduction), and study the case where the original problem has a symmetry -- which will be inherited by the branching equation. In this case, there will be a relation between Lie symmetries of the branching equation (see e.g. Olver's or Ovsjannikov's books on symmetries of differential equations [\textit{P. J. Olver}, Applications of Lie groups to differential equations. Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 107. New York etc.: Springer-Verlag. (1986; Zbl 0588.22001)] [\textit{L. V. Ovsjannikov}, Group analysis of differential equations. Moscow: ``Nauka''. 399 p. R. 1.90 (1978; Zbl 0484.58001)] and Yudovich's cosymmetry properties [\textit{V. I. Yudovich}, J. Appl. Math. Mech. 36, 424--432 (1972); translation from Prikl. Mat. Mekh. 36, 450--459 (1972; Zbl 0257.34040)]. Concrete applications are considered, including the rotation groups SO(2), SH(2) and H(2).
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    Bifurcation
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    symmetry
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