46 research outputs found

    On the structure of critical energy levels for the cubic focusing NLS on star graphs

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    We provide information on a non trivial structure of phase space of the cubic NLS on a three-edge star graph. We prove that, contrarily to the case of the standard NLS on the line, the energy associated to the cubic focusing Schr\"odinger equation on the three-edge star graph with a free (Kirchhoff) vertex does not attain a minimum value on any sphere of constant L2L^2-norm. We moreover show that the only stationary state with prescribed L^2-norm is indeed a saddle point

    Stable standing waves for a NLS on star graphs as local minimizers of the constrained energy

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    On a star graph made of N≥3N \geq 3 halflines (edges) we consider a Schr\"odinger equation with a subcritical power-type nonlinearity and an attractive delta interaction located at the vertex. From previous works it is known that there exists a family of standing waves, symmetric with respect to the exchange of edges, that can be parametrized by the mass (or L2L^2-norm) of its elements. Furthermore, if the mass is small enough, then the corresponding symmetric standing wave is a ground state and, consequently, it is orbitally stable. On the other hand, if the mass is above a threshold value, then the system has no ground state. Here we prove that orbital stability holds for every value of the mass, even if the corresponding symmetric standing wave is not a ground state, since it is anyway a {\em local} minimizer of the energy among functions with the same mass. The proof is based on a new technique that allows to restrict the analysis to functions made of pieces of soliton, reducing the problem to a finite-dimensional one. In such a way, we do not need to use direct methods of Calculus of Variations, nor linearization procedures.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure

    Stationary States of NLS on Star Graphs

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    We consider a generalized nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation (NLS) with a power nonlinearity |\psi|^2\mu\psi, of focusing type, describing propagation on the ramified structure given by N edges connected at a vertex (a star graph). To model the interaction at the junction, it is there imposed a boundary condition analogous to the \delta potential of strength \alpha on the line, including as a special case (\alpha=0) the free propagation. We show that nonlinear stationary states describing solitons sitting at the vertex exist both for attractive (\alpha0, a potential barrier) interaction. In the case of sufficiently strong attractive interaction at the vertex and power nonlinearity \mu<2, including the standard cubic case, we characterize the ground state as minimizer of a constrained action and we discuss its orbital stability. Finally we show that in the free case, for even N only, the stationary states can be used to construct traveling waves on the graph.Comment: Revised version, 5 pages, 2 figure

    Symmetries of Nonlinear PDEs on Metric Graphs and Branched Networks

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    This Special Issue focuses on recent progress in a new area of mathematical physics and applied analysis, namely, on nonlinear partial differential equations on metric graphs and branched networks. Graphs represent a system of edges connected at one or more branching points (vertices). The connection rule determines the graph topology. When the edges can be assigned a length and the wave functions on the edges are defined in metric spaces, the graph is called a metric graph. Evolution equations on metric graphs have attracted much attention as effective tools for the modeling of particle and wave dynamics in branched structures and networks. Since branched structures and networks appear in different areas of contemporary physics with many applications in electronics, biology, material science, and nanotechnology, the development of effective modeling tools is important for the many practical problems arising in these areas. The list of important problems includes searches for standing waves, exploring of their properties (e.g., stability and asymptotic behavior), and scattering dynamics. This Special Issue is a representative sample of the works devoted to the solutions of these and other problems
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