In the theory of integrable systems, a peakon ("peaked soliton") is a soliton with discontinuous first derivative; the wave profile is shaped like the graph of the function
e-|x|
The primary example of a PDE which supports peakon solutions is
ut-uxxt+(b+1)uux=buxuxx+uuxxx,
where
u(x,t)
m(x,t)
m=u-uxx
mt+mxu+bmux=0.
This equation is integrable for exactly two values of b, namely b = 2 (the Camassa–Holm equation) and b = 3 (the Degasperis–Procesi equation).
The PDE above admits the travelling wave solution
u(x,t)=ce-|x-ct|
It is not immediately obvious in what sense the peakon solution satisfies the PDE.Since the derivative ux has a jump discontinuity at the peak,the second derivative uxx must be taken in the sense of distributions and will contain a Dirac delta function;in fact,
m=u-uxx=c\delta(x-ct)
mux
m=(G/2)*u
G(x)=\exp(-|x|)
\partialtu+\partialx\left[
u2 | |
2 |
+
G | |
2 |
*\left(
bu2 | |
2 |
+
| |||||||||
2 |
\right)\right]=0.
(The star denotes convolution with respect to x.)In this formulation the function u can simply be interpreted as a weak solution in the usual sense.[3]
Multipeakon solutions are formed by taking a linear combination of several peakons, each with its own time-dependent amplitude and position. (This is a very simple structure compared to the multisoliton solutions of most other integrable PDEs, like the Korteweg–de Vries equation for instance.)The n-peakon solution thus takes the form
u(x,t)=
n | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
mi(t)
-|x-xi(t)| | |
e |
,
where the 2n functions
xi(t)
mi(t)
x |
k=
n | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
mi
-|xk-xi| | ||
e | , |
m |
k=(b-1)
n | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
mkmisgn(xk-xi)
-|xk-xi| | |
e |
(k=1,...,n)
is satisfied. (Here sgn denotes the sign function.)Note that the right-hand side of the equation for
xk
x=xk
mk
ux
\exp(-|x|)
x |
k=
u(x | |||
|
k=-(b-1)mkux(xk) (k=1,...,n).
The first equation provides some useful intuition about peakon dynamics: the velocity of each peakon equals the elevation of the wave at that point.
In the integrable cases b = 2 and b = 3, the system of ODEs describing the peakon dynamics can be solved explicitly for arbitrary n in terms of elementary functions, using inverse spectral techniques. For example, the solution for n = 3 in the Camassa–Holm case b = 2 is given by[4]
\begin{align} x1(t)&=log
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
\\ x2(t)&=log
| |||||||||||||||||||||
|
\\ x3(t)&=log(a1+a2+a3) \\ m1(t)&=
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
\\ m2(t)&=
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
\\ m3(t)&=
a1+a2+a3 | |
λ1a1+λ2a2+λ3a3 |
\end{align}
where
ak(t)=ak(0)
t/λk | |
e |
ak(0)
λk
ak
λk