Some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equations

In [7] and [8], Parker and Sochacki considered iterative methods for computing the power series solution to ${f y' = G circ y}$ where ${f G}$ is a polynomial from $mathbb{R}^n$ to $mathbb{R}^n$, including truncations of Picard iteration. The authors demonstrated that many ODE's may be tran...

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Main Authors: Paul G. Warne, G. Edgar Parker, James S. Sochacki, David C. Carothers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Texas State University 2005-04-01
Series:Electronic Journal of Differential Equations
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejde.math.txstate.edu/Volumes/2005/40/abstr.html
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spelling doaj-c689e4a3ac3b4c84a701e124cd49714c2020-11-25T01:42:53ZengTexas State UniversityElectronic Journal of Differential Equations1072-66912005-04-01200540117Some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equationsPaul G. WarneG. Edgar ParkerJames S. SochackiDavid C. CarothersIn [7] and [8], Parker and Sochacki considered iterative methods for computing the power series solution to ${f y' = G circ y}$ where ${f G}$ is a polynomial from $mathbb{R}^n$ to $mathbb{R}^n$, including truncations of Picard iteration. The authors demonstrated that many ODE's may be transformed into computationally feasible polynomial problems of this type, and the methods generalize to a broad class of initial value PDE's. In this paper we show that the subset of the real analytic functions $mathcal{A}$ consisting of functions that are components of the solution to polynomial differential equations is a proper subset of $mathcal{A}$ and that it shares the field and near-field structure of $mathcal{A}$, thus making it a proper sub-algebra. Consequences of the algebraic structure are investigated. Using these results we show that the Maclaurin or Taylor series can be generated algebraically for a large class of functions. This finding can be used to generate efficient numerical methods of arbitrary order (accuracy) for initial value ordinary differential equations. Examples to indicate these techniques are presented. Future advances in numerical solutions to initial value ordinary differential equations are indicated.http://ejde.math.txstate.edu/Volumes/2005/40/abstr.htmlAnalytic functionsinverse functionsMaclaurin polynomialsPade expansionsGrobner bases.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul G. Warne
G. Edgar Parker
James S. Sochacki
David C. Carothers
spellingShingle Paul G. Warne
G. Edgar Parker
James S. Sochacki
David C. Carothers
Some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equations
Electronic Journal of Differential Equations
Analytic functions
inverse functions
Maclaurin polynomials
Pade expansions
Grobner bases.
author_facet Paul G. Warne
G. Edgar Parker
James S. Sochacki
David C. Carothers
author_sort Paul G. Warne
title Some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equations
title_short Some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equations
title_full Some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equations
title_fullStr Some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equations
title_full_unstemmed Some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equations
title_sort some properties of solutions to polynomial systems of differential equations
publisher Texas State University
series Electronic Journal of Differential Equations
issn 1072-6691
publishDate 2005-04-01
description In [7] and [8], Parker and Sochacki considered iterative methods for computing the power series solution to ${f y' = G circ y}$ where ${f G}$ is a polynomial from $mathbb{R}^n$ to $mathbb{R}^n$, including truncations of Picard iteration. The authors demonstrated that many ODE's may be transformed into computationally feasible polynomial problems of this type, and the methods generalize to a broad class of initial value PDE's. In this paper we show that the subset of the real analytic functions $mathcal{A}$ consisting of functions that are components of the solution to polynomial differential equations is a proper subset of $mathcal{A}$ and that it shares the field and near-field structure of $mathcal{A}$, thus making it a proper sub-algebra. Consequences of the algebraic structure are investigated. Using these results we show that the Maclaurin or Taylor series can be generated algebraically for a large class of functions. This finding can be used to generate efficient numerical methods of arbitrary order (accuracy) for initial value ordinary differential equations. Examples to indicate these techniques are presented. Future advances in numerical solutions to initial value ordinary differential equations are indicated.
topic Analytic functions
inverse functions
Maclaurin polynomials
Pade expansions
Grobner bases.
url http://ejde.math.txstate.edu/Volumes/2005/40/abstr.html
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