In the mathematical theory of partial differential equations (PDE), the Monge cone is a geometrical object associated with a first-order equation. It is named for Gaspard Monge. In two dimensions, let
F(x,y,u,ux,uy)=0 (1)
be a PDE for an unknown real-valued function u in two variables x and y. Assume that this PDE is non-degenerate in the sense that
F | |
ux |
F | |
uy |
z0=u(x0,y0). (2)
Each solution to (1) satisfying (2) determines the tangent plane to the graph
z=u(x,y)
through the point
x0,y0,z0
x0,y0,z0
adx+bdy+cdz\mapstoF(x,y,z,-a/c,-b/c).
Vanishing of F determines a curve in the projective plane with homogeneous coordinates (a:b:c). The dual curve is a curve in the projective tangent space at the point, and the affine cone over this curve is the Monge cone. The cone may have multiple branches, each one an affine cone over a simple closed curve in the projective tangent space.
As the base point
x0,y0,z0
The technique generalizes to scalar first-order partial differential equations in n spatial variables; namely,
F\left(x1,...,x
,..., | |||||
|
\partialu | |
\partialxn |
\right)=0.
Through each point
0, | |
(x | |
n |
z0)
0) | |
u(x | |
n |
=z0
|\nablau|2=1,
F(x,y,u,ux,uy)=
2-1. | |
u | |
y |
a2+b2-c2=0.