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Remark on the phase shift in the Kuzmak–Whitham ansatz
S. Yu. Dobrokhotov,
D. S. Minenkov Ishlinskii Institute for Problems in Mechanics, RAS, Moscow,
Russia; Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Dolgoprudny, Moscow Oblast, Russia
Abstract:
We consider one-phase (formal) asymptotic solutions in the Kuzmak–Whitham form for the nonlinear Klein–Gordon equation and for the Korteweg–de Vries equation. In this case, the leading asymptotic expansion term has the form
$X(S(x,t)/h+\Phi(x,t),I(x,t),x,t)+O(h)$, where
$h\ll1$ is a small parameter and the phase
$S(x,t)$ and slowly changing parameters
$I(x,t)$ are to be found from the system of “averaged” Whitham equations. We obtain the equations for the phase shift
$\Phi(x,t)$ by studying the second-order correction to the leading term. The corresponding procedure for finding the phase shift is then nonuniform with respect to the transition to a linear (and weakly nonlinear) case. Our observation, which essentially follows from papers by Haberman and collaborators, is that if we incorporate the phase shift
$\Phi$ into the phase and adjust the parameter
$\tilde{I}$ by setting
$\widetilde{S}=S+h\Phi+O(h^2)$,
$\tilde{I}=I+hI_1+O(h^2)$, then the functions
$\widetilde{S}(x,t,h)$ and
$\tilde{I}(x,t,h)$ become solutions of the Cauchy problem for the same Whitham system but with modified initial conditions. These functions completely determine the leading asymptotic term, which is $X(\widetilde{S}(x,t,h)/h,\tilde{I}(x,t,h),x,t)+O(h)$.
Keywords:
rapidly oscillating one-phase asymptotic solution, nonlinear equation, Whitham method, phase shift. Received: 06.09.2010
DOI:
10.4213/tmf6616