2013
DOI: 10.1080/10236198.2013.831407
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On solutions of a discretized heat equation in discrete Clifford analysis

Abstract: The main purpose of this paper was to study solutions of the heat equation in the setting of discrete Clifford analysis. More precisely we consider this equation with discrete space and continuous time. Thereby we focus on representations of solutions by means of dual Taylor series expansions. Furthermore we develop a discrete convolution theory, apply it to the inhomogeneous heat equation and construct solutions for the related Cauchy problem by means of heat polynomials

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Cited by 12 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…'.w/. The restriction of the Cayley map (12) to the subspaces Re j e nCj (j D 1, 2, : : : , n) of ƒ 2 .R n,n / will be of special interest in the proof of Proposition 2.1, mainly because for the (paravector) subspaces H n 1,n j of H n 1,n the map ' : Re j e nCj ! H n 1,n j is evidently onto.…”
Section: Compactification Through the Cayley Mapmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…'.w/. The restriction of the Cayley map (12) to the subspaces Re j e nCj (j D 1, 2, : : : , n) of ƒ 2 .R n,n / will be of special interest in the proof of Proposition 2.1, mainly because for the (paravector) subspaces H n 1,n j of H n 1,n the map ' : Re j e nCj ! H n 1,n j is evidently onto.…”
Section: Compactification Through the Cayley Mapmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the same time there has been interest in studying evolution problems in the context of hypercomplex variables, namely discretized variants for the heat equation (cf. [1]) and for the Cauchy-Kovaleskaya extension (cf. [8]).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A first discretization is a discrete Fueter's theorem, allowing A topic for future research and a nice application would involve a factorization of the discrete Heat equation (see [12]) by means of a parabolic Dirac operator, which may be considered as an extension of the Dirac operator with an additional time dimension, and applying (a slightly modified version of ) Fueters theorem to obtain solutions to the first-order Clifford-Heat equation. Moreover, the use of axially monogenic special functions such as the Clifford-Hermite polynomials may be a starting point for the study of wavelet transforms in the discrete setting, as has been performed in the continuous setting in [15].…”
Section: Conclusion and Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The former, in turn, lead to discrete versions of the spherical Bessel function, which appears in the theory of the Helmholtz operator, while the latter play a part in solutions to the discrete Heat equation (e.g. [12]), which can be interpreted as an extension of the Dirac equation with an additional time dimension. Clifford-Hermite polynomials are also being used in the definition of continuous wavelet transforms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%