Painlevé transcendents
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In mathematics, Painlevé transcendents are solutions to certain
nonlinear In mathematics and science, a nonlinear system is a system in which the change of the output is not proportional to the change of the input. Nonlinear problems are of interest to engineers, biologists, physicists, mathematicians, and many othe ...
second-order ordinary differential equations in the complex plane with the Painlevé property (the only movable singularities are poles), but which are not generally solvable in terms of
elementary functions In mathematics, an elementary function is a function of a single variable (typically real or complex) that is defined as taking sums, products, roots and compositions of finitely many polynomial, rational, trigonometric, hyperbolic, and ...
. They were discovered by , , , and .


History

Painlevé transcendents have their origin in the study of
special functions Special functions are particular mathematical functions that have more or less established names and notations due to their importance in mathematical analysis, functional analysis, geometry, physics, or other applications. The term is defined b ...
, which often arise as solutions of differential equations, as well as in the study of isomonodromic deformations of linear differential equations. One of the most useful classes of special functions are the elliptic functions. They are defined by second order ordinary differential equations whose singularities have the Painlevé property: the only movable singularities are
poles Poles,, ; singular masculine: ''Polak'', singular feminine: ''Polka'' or Polish people, are a West Slavic nation and ethnic group, who share a common history, culture, the Polish language and are identified with the country of Poland in C ...
. This property is rare in nonlinear equations. Poincaré and L. Fuchs showed that any first order equation with the Painlevé property can be transformed into the
Weierstrass elliptic function In mathematics, the Weierstrass elliptic functions are elliptic functions that take a particularly simple form. They are named for Karl Weierstrass. This class of functions are also referred to as ℘-functions and they are usually denoted by t ...
or the
Riccati equation In mathematics, a Riccati equation in the narrowest sense is any first-order ordinary differential equation that is quadratic in the unknown function. In other words, it is an equation of the form : y'(x) = q_0(x) + q_1(x) \, y(x) + q_2(x) \, y^2( ...
, which can all be solved explicitly in terms of integration and previously known special functions.
Émile Picard Charles Émile Picard (; 24 July 1856 – 11 December 1941) was a French mathematician. He was elected the fifteenth member to occupy seat 1 of the Académie française in 1924. Life He was born in Paris on 24 July 1856 and educated there at t ...
pointed out that for orders greater than 1, movable essential singularities can occur, and found a special case of what was later called Painleve VI equation (see below). (For orders greater than 2 the solutions can have moving natural boundaries.) Around 1900,
Paul Painlevé Paul Painlevé (; 5 December 1863 – 29 October 1933) was a French mathematician and statesman. He served twice as Prime Minister of the Third Republic: 12 September – 13 November 1917 and 17 April – 22 November 1925. His entry into politic ...
studied second order differential equations with no movable singularities. He found that up to certain transformations, every such equation of the form :y^=R(y^,y,t) (with R a rational function) can be put into one of fifty ''canonical forms'' (listed in ). found that forty-four of the fifty equations are reducible in the sense that they can be solved in terms of previously known functions, leaving just six equations requiring the introduction of new special functions to solve them. There were some computational errors, and as a result he missed three of the equations, including the general form of Painleve VI. The errors were fixed and classification completed by Painlevé's student Bertrand Gambier. Independently of Painlevé and Gambier, equation Painleve VI was found by Richard Fuchs from completely different considerations: he studied isomonodromic deformations of linear differential equations with regular singularities. It was a controversial open problem for many years to show that these six equations really were irreducible for generic values of the parameters (they are sometimes reducible for special parameter values; see below), but this was finally proved by and . These six second order nonlinear differential equations are called the Painlevé equations and their solutions are called the Painlevé transcendents. The most general form of the sixth equation was missed by Painlevé, but was discovered in 1905 by Richard Fuchs (son of
Lazarus Fuchs Lazarus Immanuel Fuchs (5 May 1833 – 26 April 1902) was a Jewish-German mathematician who contributed important research in the field of linear differential equations. He was born in Moschin (Mosina) (located in Grand Duchy of Posen) and ...
), as the differential equation satisfied by the singularity of a second order Fuchsian equation with 4 regular singular points on the
projective line In mathematics, a projective line is, roughly speaking, the extension of a usual line by a point called a ''point at infinity''. The statement and the proof of many theorems of geometry are simplified by the resultant elimination of special cases; ...
\mathbf^1 under monodromy-preserving deformations. It was added to Painlevé's list by . tried to extend Painlevé's work to higher order equations, finding some third order equations with the Painlevé property.


List of Painlevé equations

These six equations, traditionally called Painlevé I-VI, are as follows: The numbers \alpha, \beta, \gamma, \delta are complex constants. By rescaling y and t one can choose two of the parameters for type III, and one of the parameters for type V, so these types really have only 2 and 3 independent parameters.


Singularities

The singularities of solutions of these equations are *The point \infty, and *The point 0 for types III, V and VI, and *The point 1 for type VI, and *Possibly some movable poles For type I, the singularities are (movable) double poles of residue 0, and the solutions all have an infinite number of such poles in the complex plane. The functions with a double pole at z_0 have the Laurent series expansion :(z-z_0)^-\frac(z-z_0)^2-\frac(z-z_0)^3+h(z-z_0)^4+\frac(z-z_0)^6+\cdots converging in some neighborhood of z_0 (where h is some complex number). The location of the poles was described in detail by . The number of poles in a ball of radius R grows roughly like a constant times R^. For type II, the singularities are all (movable) simple poles.


Degenerations

The first five Painlevé equations are degenerations of the sixth equation. More precisely, some of the equations are degenerations of others according to the following diagram (see , p.380), which also gives the corresponding degenerations of the Gauss hypergeometric function (see , p.372)


Hamiltonian systems

The Painlevé equations can all be represented as
Hamiltonian system A Hamiltonian system is a dynamical system governed by Hamilton's equations. In physics, this dynamical system describes the evolution of a physical system such as a planetary system or an electron in an electromagnetic field. These systems can ...
s. Example: If we put :\displaystyle q=y,\quad p=y^+y^2+t/2 then the second Painlevé equation :\displaystyle y^ =2y^3+ty+b-1/2 is equivalent to the Hamiltonian system :\displaystyle q^=\frac = p-q^2-t/2 :\displaystyle p^=-\frac = 2pq+b for the Hamiltonian :\displaystyle H=p(p-2q^2-t)/2 -bq.


Symmetries

A Bäcklund transformation is a transformation of the dependent and independent variables of a differential equation that transforms it to a similar equation. The Painlevé equations all have discrete groups of Bäcklund transformations acting on them, which can be used to generate new solutions from known ones.


Example type I

The set of solutions of the type I Painlevé equation :y^=6y^2+t is acted on by the order 5 symmetry y\to\zeta^3 y, t\to\zeta t where \zeta is a fifth root of 1. There are two solutions invariant under this transformation, one with a pole of order 2 at 0, and the other with a zero of order 3 at 0.


Example type II

In the Hamiltonian formalism of the type II Painlevé equation :\displaystyle y^=2y^3+ty+b-1/2 with :\displaystyle q=y,p=y^\prime+y^2+t/2 two Bäcklund transformations are given by :\displaystyle (q,p,b)\to (q+b/p,p,-b) and :\displaystyle (q,p,b)\to (-q, -p+2q^2+t,1-b). These both have order 2, and generate an
infinite dihedral group In mathematics, the infinite dihedral group Dih∞ is an infinite group with properties analogous to those of the finite dihedral groups. In two-dimensional geometry, the infinite dihedral group represents the frieze group symmetry, ''p1m1'', ...
of Bäcklund transformations (which is in fact the affine Weyl group of A_1; see below). If b=1/2 then the equation has the solution y=0; applying the Bäcklund transformations generates an infinite family of rational functions that are solutions, such as y=1/t, y=2(t^3-2)/t(t^3-4), ... Okamoto discovered that the parameter space of each Painlevé equation can be identified with the
Cartan subalgebra In mathematics, a Cartan subalgebra, often abbreviated as CSA, is a nilpotent subalgebra \mathfrak of a Lie algebra \mathfrak that is self-normalising (if ,Y\in \mathfrak for all X \in \mathfrak, then Y \in \mathfrak). They were introduced by ...
of a
semisimple Lie algebra In mathematics, a Lie algebra is semisimple if it is a direct sum of simple Lie algebras. (A simple Lie algebra is a non-abelian Lie algebra without any non-zero proper ideals). Throughout the article, unless otherwise stated, a Lie algebra is ...
, such that actions of the
affine Weyl group In mathematics, a Coxeter group, named after H. S. M. Coxeter, is an abstract group that admits a formal description in terms of reflections (or kaleidoscopic mirrors). Indeed, the finite Coxeter groups are precisely the finite Euclidean refle ...
lift to Bäcklund transformations of the equations. The Lie algebras for P_I, P_, P_, P_, P_V, P_ are 0, A_1, A_1\oplus A_1, A_2, A_3, and D_4.


Relation to other areas

One of the main reasons for which Painlevé equations are studied is their relations with monodromy of linear systems with regular singularities; in particular, Painlevé VI was discovered by Richard Fuchs because of this relation. This subject is described in the article on isomonodromic deformation. The Painlevé equations are all reductions of integrable partial differential equations; see . The Painlevé equations are all reductions of the self dual Yang-Mills equations; see . The Painlevé transcendents appear in
random matrix theory In probability theory and mathematical physics, a random matrix is a matrix-valued random variable—that is, a matrix in which some or all elements are random variables. Many important properties of physical systems can be represented mathemat ...
in the formula for the
Tracy–Widom distribution The Tracy–Widom distribution is a probability distribution from random matrix theory introduced by . It is the distribution of the normalized largest eigenvalue of a random Hermitian matrix. The distribution is defined as a Fredholm determinant. ...
, the 2D
Ising model The Ising model () (or Lenz-Ising model or Ising-Lenz model), named after the physicists Ernst Ising and Wilhelm Lenz, is a mathematical model of ferromagnetism in statistical mechanics. The model consists of discrete variables that represent ...
, the asymmetric simple exclusion process and in two-dimensional quantum gravity. The Painlevé VI equation appears in
two-dimensional conformal field theory A two-dimensional conformal field theory is a quantum field theory on a Euclidean two-dimensional space, that is invariant under local conformal transformations. In contrast to other types of conformal field theories, two-dimensional conformal fi ...
: it is obeyed by combinations of conformal blocks at both c=1 and c=\infty, where c is the central charge of the
Virasoro algebra In mathematics, the Virasoro algebra (named after the physicist Miguel Ángel Virasoro) is a complex Lie algebra and the unique central extension of the Witt algebra. It is widely used in two-dimensional conformal field theory and in string the ...
.


References

* * * * * * * * * ''See sections 7.3, chapter 8, and the Appendices'' * * *. * * * * * * * * * * * * *


External links

* Clarkson, P.A
Painlevé Transcendents
Chapter 32 of the NIS
Digital Library of Mathematical Functions
* Joshi, Nalin

* Takasaki, Kanehis

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Painleve Transcendents Special functions Ordinary differential equations