Analytic approximation of Volterra's population model
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2361732
DOI10.1515/jamsi-2017-0001zbMath1365.65278OpenAlexW2733595140MaRDI QIDQ2361732
Publication date: 5 July 2017
Published in: Journal of Applied Mathematics, Statistics and Informatics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1515/jamsi-2017-0001
Volterra's population modelanalytic approximationmodified Adomian decomposition methodPadé techniquenonlinear intgro-differential equation
Integro-ordinary differential equations (45J05) Numerical methods for integral equations (65R20) Population dynamics (general) (92D25) Volterra integral equations (45D05)
Related Items
Steady natural convection Couette flow with wall conduction and thermal boundary condition of third kind ⋮ An approximate analytical solution of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation with harmonic oscillator using homotopy perturbation method and Laplace-Adomian decomposition method ⋮ A new algorithm for the solution of nonlinear two-dimensional Volterra integro-differential equations of high-order ⋮ An analytical approach for systems of fractional differential equations by means of the innovative homotopy perturbation method
Cites Work
- Convenient analytic recurrence algorithms for the Adomian polynomials
- A novel application of radial basis functions for solving a model of first-order integro-ordinary differential equation
- Analytical approximations for a population growth model with fractional order
- Collocation method using sinc and rational Legendre functions for solving Volterra's population model
- A numerical approximation for Volterra's population growth model with fractional order
- Analytical approximations and Padé approximants for Volterra's population model
- Rational Chebyshev tau method for solving Volterra's population model.
- Numerical approximations for population growth models
- Solving concrete examples by Adomian method
- Rational pseudospectral approximation to the solution of a nonlinear integro-differential equation arising in modeling of the population growth
- Operation matrix method based on Bernstein polynomials for the Riccati differential equation and Volterra population model
- Composite spectral functions for solving Volterra's population model
- Vito Volterra and theoretical ecology
- A new algorithm for solving differential equations
- Population Growth in a Closed System
- Classroom Note:Numerical and Analytical Solutions of Volterra's Population Model
- A new HPM for ordinary differential equations
- From Calculus to Analysis