Lin–Tsien equation

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The Lin–Tsien equation (named after C. C. Lin and H. S. Tsien) is an integrable partial differential equation

Chia-Chiao Lin was a Chinese-born American applied mathematician and Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Hsue-Chu Tsien, COL, was an aeronautic and mechanical engineer who played important roles in aircraft building in both China and afterward the United States.

In the context of differential equations to integrate an equation means to solve it from initial conditions. Accordingly, an integrable system is a system of differential equations whose behavior is determined by initial conditions and which can be integrated from those initial conditions.

Integrability of this equation follows from its being, modulo an appropriate linear change of dependent and independent variables, a potential form of the dispersionless KP equation. Namely, if satisfies the Lin–Tsien equation, then satisfies, modulo the said change of variables, the dispersionless KP equation. The Lin-Tsien equation admits a (3+1)-dimensional integrable generalization, see. [1]

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References

  1. Sergyeyev A. "New integrable (3+1)-dimensional systems and contact geometry", Lett. Math. Phys. 108 (2018), no. 2, 359-376, arXiv : 1401.2122, https://arxiv.org/abs/1401.2122 doi : 10.1007/s11005-017-1013-4