Thermal-conductance equation
heat equation
The homogeneous partial differential equation
$$\frac{\partial u}{\partial t}-a^2\sum_{k=1}^n\frac{\partial^2u}{\partial x_k^2}=0.$$
This equation is the simplest example of a parabolic partial differential equation. For $n=3$ it describes the process of heat diffusion in a solid body. The first boundary value problem (in a cylindrical domain) and the Cauchy–Dirichlet problem (in a half-space) are the fundamental well-posed problems for the thermal-conductance equation. A solution to the characteristic (Cauchy) problem can be given in explicit form:
$$u(x,t)=\frac{1}{(2a\sqrt{\pi t})^n}\int\limits_{\mathbf R^n}\exp\left(-\frac{|x-\xi|^2}{4a^2t}\right)\phi(\xi)d\xi,\quad t>0,$$
where $\phi(\xi)$ is a fixed continuous uniformly bounded function on $\mathbf R^n$.
References
[1] | A.V. Bitsadze, "The equations of mathematical physics" , MIR (1980) (Translated from Russian) |
[2] | V.S. Vladimirov, "Equations of mathematical physics" , MIR (1984) (Translated from Russian) |
Comments
References
[a1] | J.R. Cannon, "The one-dimensional heat equation" , Addison-Wesley (1984) |
[a2] | H.S. Carslaw, J.C. Jaeger, "Conduction of heat in solids" , Clarendon Press (1945) |
[a3] | J. Cranck, "The mathematics of diffusion" , Clarendon Press (1975) |
[a4] | A. Friedman, "Partial differential equations of parabolic type" , Prentice-Hall (1964) |
[a5] | M. Jakob, "Heat transfer" , 1–2 , Wiley (1975) |
[a6] | M.N. Ozisik, "Basic heat transfer" , McGraw-Hill (1977) |
[a7] | D.V. Widder, "The heat equation" , Acad. Press (1975) |
Thermal-conductance equation. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Thermal-conductance_equation&oldid=32607