English

The unified transform method for linear initial-boundary value problems: a spectral interpretation

Spectral Theory 2014-08-19 v1 Analysis of PDEs

Abstract

It is known that the unified transform method may be used to solve any well-posed initial-boundary value problem for a linear constant-coefficient evolution equation on the finite interval or the half-line. In contrast, classical methods such as Fourier series and transform techniques may only be used to solve certain problems. The solution representation obtained by such a classical method is known to be an expansion in the eigenfunctions or generalised eigenfunctions of the self-adjoint ordinary differential operator associated with the spatial part of the initial-boundary value problem. In this work, we emphasise that the unified transform method may be viewed as the natural extension of Fourier transform techniques for non-self-adjoint operators. Moreover, we investigate the spectral meaning of the transform pair used in the new method; we discuss the recent definition of a new class of spectral functionals and show how it permits the diagonalisation of certain non-self-adjoint spatial differential operators.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1408.3659,
  title  = {The unified transform method for linear initial-boundary value problems: a spectral interpretation},
  author = {David A. Smith},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1408.3659},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T05:30:32.776Z