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KdV '95 : Proceedings of the International Symposium Held in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, April 23-26, 1995 (Reprinted from ACTA Applicanda ed.)

etc.(Edited by)Hazewinkel, Michiel(Edited by)
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Exactly 100 years ago, in 1895, G. de Vries, under the supervision of D.J. Korteweg, defended his thesis on what is now known as the Korteweg-de Vries Equation.

They published a joint paper in 1895 in the "Philosophical Magazine", entitled "On the change of form of long waves advancing in a rectangular canal, and on a new type of long stationary wave".

In the 1960s research on this and related equations exploded.

There are now some 3100 papers in mathematics and physics that contain a mention of the phrase "Korteweg-de Vries equation" in their title or abstract, and there are thousands more in other areas, such as biology, chemistry, electronics, geology, oceanology, meteorology, and so forth. And, of course, the KdV equation is only one of what are now called (Liouville) completely integrable systems.

The KdV and its relatives continually turn up in situations when one wishes to incorporate nonlinear and dispersive effects into wave-type phenomena.

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Product Details
Kluwer Academic Publishers
0792334671 / 9780792334675
Hardback
515.45
31/05/1995
United States
516 pages
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Learn More