Burgers equation with zero boundaries
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I am curious how I can avoid non-zero boundary values for the burgers equation, my idea is something like this:
$$begin{cases} partial_t u(x,t)+ u(x,t)partial_x u(x,t) = f(x,t)&\
u(x,0)=0,& mbox{for } xin(0,1)\
u(0,t0)=0,& mbox{for } tin(0,1) end{cases}$$
So which $f$ could be a good idea? Something like $f=1$ or $f=sin(x)$?
pde boundary-value-problem
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up vote
0
down vote
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I am curious how I can avoid non-zero boundary values for the burgers equation, my idea is something like this:
$$begin{cases} partial_t u(x,t)+ u(x,t)partial_x u(x,t) = f(x,t)&\
u(x,0)=0,& mbox{for } xin(0,1)\
u(0,t0)=0,& mbox{for } tin(0,1) end{cases}$$
So which $f$ could be a good idea? Something like $f=1$ or $f=sin(x)$?
pde boundary-value-problem
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I am curious how I can avoid non-zero boundary values for the burgers equation, my idea is something like this:
$$begin{cases} partial_t u(x,t)+ u(x,t)partial_x u(x,t) = f(x,t)&\
u(x,0)=0,& mbox{for } xin(0,1)\
u(0,t0)=0,& mbox{for } tin(0,1) end{cases}$$
So which $f$ could be a good idea? Something like $f=1$ or $f=sin(x)$?
pde boundary-value-problem
I am curious how I can avoid non-zero boundary values for the burgers equation, my idea is something like this:
$$begin{cases} partial_t u(x,t)+ u(x,t)partial_x u(x,t) = f(x,t)&\
u(x,0)=0,& mbox{for } xin(0,1)\
u(0,t0)=0,& mbox{for } tin(0,1) end{cases}$$
So which $f$ could be a good idea? Something like $f=1$ or $f=sin(x)$?
pde boundary-value-problem
pde boundary-value-problem
asked Dec 1 at 12:46
cptflint
115
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