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Wolfgang K. Schief

Bio: Wolfgang K. Schief is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Integrable system & Discretization. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 158 publications receiving 3785 citations. Previous affiliations of Wolfgang K. Schief include Technical University of Berlin & Australian Research Council.


Papers
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MonographDOI
24 Jun 2002
TL;DR: Backlund-Darboux transformations with their remarkable associated nonlinear superposition principles and importance in soliton theory have been explored in this article, where the authors also explore the extensive body of literature from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by such eminent geometers as Bianchi, Darboux, Backlund, and Eisenhart on transformations of privileged classes of surfaces which leave key geometric properties unchanged.
Abstract: This book describes the remarkable connections that exist between the classical differential geometry of surfaces and modern soliton theory. The authors also explore the extensive body of literature from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by such eminent geometers as Bianchi, Darboux, Backlund, and Eisenhart on transformations of privileged classes of surfaces which leave key geometric properties unchanged. Prominent amongst these are Backlund-Darboux transformations with their remarkable associated nonlinear superposition principles and importance in soliton theory. It is with these transformations and the links they afford between the classical differential geometry of surfaces and the nonlinear equations of soliton theory that the present text is concerned. In this geometric context, solitonic equations arise out of the Gaus-Mainardi-Codazzi equations for various types of surfaces that admit invariance under Backlund-Darboux transformations. This text is appropriate for use at a higher undergraduate or graduate level for applied mathematicians or mathematical physics.

835 citations

Book
01 Jun 2002

171 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the discrete Darboux system admits constraints on the (adjoint) eigenfunctions which may be interpreted as discrete orthogonality conditions on the lattices.
Abstract: It is shown that the discrete Darboux system, descriptive of conjugate lattices in Euclidean spaces, admits constraints on the (adjoint) eigenfunctions which may be interpreted as discrete orthogonality conditions on the lattices. Thus, it turns out that the elementary quadrilaterals of orthogonal lattices are cyclic. Orthogonal lattices on lines, planes and spheres are discussed and the underlying integrable systems in one, two and three dimensions are derived explicitly. A discrete analogue of Bianchi's Ribaucour transformation is set down and particular orthogonal lattices are given. As a by–product, discrete Dini surfaces are obtained.

134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a discrete analogue of the Moutard transformation is constructed by means of discrete analogues of the kink solutions of the continuous system, and it is shown that, in a particular form, this system is an integrable discretization of a (2+1)-dimensional sine-Gordon system.
Abstract: Superposition principles, both linear and nonlinear, associated with the Moutard transformation are found. On suitable reinterpretation, these constitute an integrable discrete nonlinear system and its associated linear system. Further, it is shown that, in a particular form, this system is an integrable discretization of a (2+1)–dimensional sine–Gordon system. Solutions of the discrete nonlinear system are constructed by means of a discrete analogue of the Moutard transformation. Included in these solutions are discrete analogues of the kink solutions of the continuous system.

133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The purely binormal motion of curves of constant curvature or torsion is shown to lead to integrable extensions of the Dym and classical sine-Gordon equations as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The purely binormal motion of curves of constant curvature or torsion, respectively, is shown to lead to integrable extensions of the Dym and classical sine–Gordon equations. In the case of the extended Dym equation, a reciprocal invariance is used to establish the existence of novel dual–soliton surfaces associated with a given soliton surface. A cc–ideal formulation is adduced to obtain a matrix Darboux invariance for the extended Dym and reciprocally linked m 2 KdV equations. A Backlund transformation with a classical constant–length property is thereby constructed which allows the generation of associated soliton surfaces. Analogues of both Backlund9s and Bianchi9s classical transformations are derived for the extended sine–Gordon system.

100 citations


Cited by
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MonographDOI
24 Jun 2002
TL;DR: Backlund-Darboux transformations with their remarkable associated nonlinear superposition principles and importance in soliton theory have been explored in this article, where the authors also explore the extensive body of literature from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by such eminent geometers as Bianchi, Darboux, Backlund, and Eisenhart on transformations of privileged classes of surfaces which leave key geometric properties unchanged.
Abstract: This book describes the remarkable connections that exist between the classical differential geometry of surfaces and modern soliton theory. The authors also explore the extensive body of literature from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by such eminent geometers as Bianchi, Darboux, Backlund, and Eisenhart on transformations of privileged classes of surfaces which leave key geometric properties unchanged. Prominent amongst these are Backlund-Darboux transformations with their remarkable associated nonlinear superposition principles and importance in soliton theory. It is with these transformations and the links they afford between the classical differential geometry of surfaces and the nonlinear equations of soliton theory that the present text is concerned. In this geometric context, solitonic equations arise out of the Gaus-Mainardi-Codazzi equations for various types of surfaces that admit invariance under Backlund-Darboux transformations. This text is appropriate for use at a higher undergraduate or graduate level for applied mathematicians or mathematical physics.

835 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed the geometry and dynamics of nonholonomic systems using an Ehresmann connection to model the constraints, and showed how the curvature of this connection entered into Lagrange's equations.
Abstract: This work develops the geometry and dynamics of mechanical systems with nonholonomic constraints and symmetry from the perspective of Lagrangian mechanics and with a view to control theoretical applications. The basic methodology is that of geometric mechanics applied to the formulation of Lagrange d'Alembert, generalizing the use of connections and momentum maps associated with a given symmetry group to this case. We begin by formulating the mechanics of nonholonomic systems using an Ehresmann connection to model the constraints, and show how the curvature of this connection enters into Lagrange's equations. Unlike the situation with standard configuration space constraints, the presence of symmetries in the nonholonomic case may or may not lead to conservation laws. However, the momentum map determined by the symmetry group still satisfies a useful differential equation that decouples from the group variables. This momentum equation, which plays an important role in control problems, involves parallel transport operators and is computed explicitly in coordinates. An alternative description using a ``body reference frame'' relates part of the momentum equation to the components of the Euler-Poincar\'{e} equations along those symmetry directions consistent with the constraints. One of the purposes of this paper is to derive this evolution equation for the momentum and to distinguish geometrically and mechanically the cases where it is conserved and those where it is not. An example of the former is a ball or vertical disk rolling on a flat plane and an example of the latter is the snakeboard, a modified version of the skateboard which uses momentum coupling for locomotion generation. We construct a synthesis of the mechanical connection and the Ehresmann connection defining the constraints, obtaining an important new object we call the nonholonomic connection. When the nonholonomic connection is a principal connection for the given symmetry group, we show how to perform Lagrangian reduction in the presence of nonholonomic constraints, generalizing previous results which only held in special cases. Several detailed examples are given to illustrate the theory. September 1994 Revised, March 1995 Revised, June 1995

763 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a classification of discrete integrable systems on quad-graphs is given, and the notion of integrability laid in the basis of the classification is the three-dimensional consistency.
Abstract: A classification of discrete integrable systems on quad-graphs, i.e. on surface cell decompositions with quadrilateral faces, is given. The notion of integrability laid in the basis of the classification is the three-dimensional consistency. This property yields, among other features, the existence of the discrete zero curvature with a spectral parameter. For all integrable systems of the obtained exhaustive list, the so called three-leg forms are found. This establishes Lagrangian and symplectic structures for these systems, and the connection to discrete systems of the Toda type on arbitrary graphs. Generalizations of these ideas to the three-dimensional integrable systems and to the quantum context are also discussed.

612 citations

01 Sep 1976
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a direct and systematic way of finding exact solutions and Backlund transformations of a certain class of nonlinear evolution equations, which they solve exactly using a kind of perturbational approach.
Abstract: The main purpos e of this chapter is to present a direct and systematic way of finding exact solutions and Backlund transformations of a certain class of nonlinear evolution equations. The nonlinear evolution equations are transformed, by changing the dependent variable(s), into bilinear differential equations of the following special form $$ F\left( {\frac{\partial }{{\partial t}} - \frac{\partial }{{\partial {t^1}}},\frac{\partial }{{\partial x}} - \frac{\partial }{{\partial {x^1}}}} \right)f(t,x)f({t^1},{x^1}){|_{t = {t^1},x = {x^1}}} = 0 $$ , which we solve exactly using a kind of perturbational approach.

612 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, He's variational iteration method is introduced to overcome the difficulty arising in calculating Adomian polynomials, and the solutions of Burger's equation and coupled Burger's equations are exactly obtained.

485 citations