Solitonlike excitations in a one-dimensional electrical transmission line
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3024257
DOI10.1063/1.1843272zbMath1067.94021OpenAlexW2079747845MaRDI QIDQ3024257
François Béceau Pelap, Mansour M. Faye
Publication date: 30 June 2005
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1843272
Analytic circuit theory (94C05) Soliton theory, asymptotic behavior of solutions of infinite-dimensional Hamiltonian systems (37K40)
Related Items
Solitary signals in electrical nonlinear transmission line ⋮ Modulational instability and soliton propagation in an alternate right-handed and left-handed multi-coupled nonlinear dissipative transmission network ⋮ Travelling wave solutions and soliton solutions for the nonlinear transmission line using the generalized Riccati equation mapping method ⋮ Non-local telegrapher's equation as a transmission line model ⋮ Ginzburg-Landau models of nonlinear electric transmission networks ⋮ Modulational instability and peak solitary wave in a discrete nonlinear electrical transmission line described by the modified extended nonlinear Schrödinger equation ⋮ Bright and dark soliton solutions and Bäcklund transformation for the Eckhaus-Kundu equation with the cubic-quintic nonlinearity ⋮ New soliton solutions for a discrete electrical lattice using the Jacobi elliptical function method ⋮ Mathematical modeling of chirped modulated waves along a multi-coupled nonlinear electrical transmission line with dispersive elements ⋮ Comment on: ``Compact envelope dark solitary wave in a discrete nonlinear electrical transmission line ⋮ Derivation of Korteweg-de Vries flow equations from modified nonlinear Schrödinger equation
Cites Work
- On the modulation of water waves in the neighbourhood of kh ≈ 1.363
- The modulation of weakly nonlinear dispersive waves of an extended Φ4model near the marginal state of instability
- Modulational Instability in Some Physical Systems
- On Stability of a Nonlinear Pendulum
- The disintegration of wave trains on deep water Part 1. Theory