1984
DOI: 10.1002/cpa.3160370105
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Scattering and inverse scattering for first order systems

Abstract: It is well-known that a number of important nonlinear evolution equations are associated to spectral problems for ordinary differential operators (see [l], [4]). The initial value problem for the evolution equation can, in principle, be solved by solving an inverse scattering problem. Schematically, the unknown function u( * , t ) (possibly vector-valued) is identified with or transformed into the coefficients q( -, t ) of a differential operator L,. A spectral problem is associated to L, which carries (at lea… Show more

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Cited by 521 publications
(831 citation statements)
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References 7 publications
(9 reference statements)
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“…We can write (2.6) as where the off-diagonal entries can be expressed in terms of L(A) or R(A) by using 10) which is immediate from (2.33).…”
Section: The Scattering Matrixmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We can write (2.6) as where the off-diagonal entries can be expressed in terms of L(A) or R(A) by using 10) which is immediate from (2.33).…”
Section: The Scattering Matrixmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such solutions are called wavefunctions (we use the terminology of [45]). The scattering theory for this equation when A is a matrix that vanishes on the diagonal was considered by Zakharov et al [48] and by Beals and Coifman [13,14]. In our work, A ∈ m. As a consequence, even though A is completely determined by its off-diagonal elements, its diagonal entries do not vanish.…”
Section: Scattering and Inverse Scattering Theorymentioning
confidence: 72%
“…This theory does not directly apply to (1.21) since m is not semi-simple. We modify [13,14] to obtain a scattering and inverse scattering theory for (1.21). Among other results, we obtain a hierarchy of integrable flows and global well-posedness theorems for (1.21) including the probabilistically natural case.…”
Section: Statement Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Recently, Demontis and van der Mee in [17][18][19] studied the problem of reconstructing non-self-adjoint 326 R. O. Hryniv and S. S. Manko IEOT matrix Zakharov-Shabat and AKNS systems. An interesting approach to inverse scattering analysis of more general systems was suggested by Beals and Coifman [8][9][10] and Beals, Deift, and Tomei [11]. The motivation for the present work was two-fold.…”
Section: Q(x) Q(x) −P(x)mentioning
confidence: 99%