691 research outputs found
Method of group foliation, hodograph transformation and non-invariant solutions of the Boyer-Finley equation
We present the method of group foliation for constructing non-invariant
solutions of partial differential equations on an important example of the
Boyer-Finley equation from the theory of gravitational instantons. We show that
the commutativity constraint for a pair of invariant differential operators
leads to a set of its non-invariant solutions. In the second part of the paper
we demonstrate how the hodograph transformation of the ultra-hyperbolic version
of Boyer-Finley equation in an obvious way leads to its non-invariant solution
obtained recently by Manas and Alonso. Due to extra symmetries, this solution
is conditionally invariant, unlike non-invariant solutions obtained previously.
We make the hodograph transformation of the group foliation structure and
derive three invariant relations valid for the hodograph solution, additional
to resolving equations, in an attempt to obtain the orbit of this solution.Comment: to appear in the special issue of Theor. Math. Phys. for the
Proceedings of NEEDS2002; Keywords: Heavenly equation, group foliation,
non-invariant solutions, hodograph transformatio
Recursion Operators and Tri-Hamiltonian Structure of the First Heavenly Equation of Pleba\'nski
We present first heavenly equation of Pleba\'nski in a two-component
evolutionary form and obtain Lagrangian and Hamiltonian representations of this
system. We study all point symmetries of the two-component system and, using
the inverse Noether theorem in the Hamiltonian form, obtain all the integrals
of motion corresponding to each variational (Noether) symmetry. We derive two
linearly independent recursion operators for symmetries of this system related
by a discrete symmetry of both the two-component system and its symmetry
condition. Acting by these operators on the first Hamiltonian operator we
obtain second and third Hamiltonian operators. However, we were not able to
find Hamiltonian densities corresponding to the latter two operators.
Therefore, we construct two recursion operators, which are either even or odd,
respectively, under the above-mentioned discrete symmetry. Acting with them on
, we generate another two Hamiltonian operators and and find
the corresponding Hamiltonian densities, thus obtaining second and third
Hamiltonian representations for the first heavenly equation in a two-component
form. Using P. Olver's theory of the functional multi-vectors, we check that
the linear combination of , and with arbitrary constant
coefficients satisfies Jacobi identities. Since their skew symmetry is obvious,
these three operators are compatible Hamiltonian operators and hence we obtain
a tri-Hamiltonian representation of the first heavenly equation. Our
well-founded conjecture applied here is that P. Olver's method works fine for
nonlocal operators and our proof of the Jacobi identities and bi-Hamiltonian
structures crucially depends on the validity of this conjecture.Comment: Some text overlap with our paper arXiv:1510.03666 is caused by our
use here of basically the same method for discovering the Hamiltonian and
bi-Hamiltonian structures of the equation, but the equation considered here
and the results are totally different from arXiv:1510.0366
Debt Deception: How Debt Buyers Abuse the Legal System to Prey on Lower-Income New Yorkers
In this report, we examine lawsuits filed by debt buyers and their profound impact on low- and moderate-income New Yorkers, lower-income communities, and communities of color. We begin, in Part I, with background on the debt buying industry, including an analysis of the debt buyer business model and collection methods. Part II focuses on debt buyer lawsuits, particularly the systemic problems at the root of these lawsuits. In Part III, we highlight specific findings from a study of debt buyer lawsuits in New York City. We draw results from two data sets: (1) a 365-case sample of lawsuits brought by the 26 debt buyers who filed the greatest number of cases in New York City between January 2006 and July 2008 ("Court Sample"); and (2) a 451-case sample of callers to NEDAP's legal hotline who were sued by a creditor or debt buyer in 2008 ("Client Sample"). Finally, in Part IV, we recommend policy and legislative reforms to address the problems documented in this repor
Recursions of Symmetry Orbits and Reduction without Reduction
We consider a four-dimensional PDE possessing partner symmetries mainly on
the example of complex Monge-Amp\`ere equation (CMA). We use simultaneously two
pairs of symmetries related by a recursion relation, which are mutually complex
conjugate for CMA. For both pairs of partner symmetries, using Lie equations,
we introduce explicitly group parameters as additional variables, replacing
symmetry characteristics and their complex conjugates by derivatives of the
unknown with respect to group parameters. We study the resulting system of six
equations in the eight-dimensional space, that includes CMA, four equations of
the recursion between partner symmetries and one integrability condition of
this system. We use point symmetries of this extended system for performing its
symmetry reduction with respect to group parameters that facilitates solving
the extended system. This procedure does not imply a reduction in the number of
physical variables and hence we end up with orbits of non-invariant solutions
of CMA, generated by one partner symmetry, not used in the reduction. These
solutions are determined by six linear equations with constant coefficients in
the five-dimensional space which are obtained by a three-dimensional Legendre
transformation of the reduced extended system. We present algebraic and
exponential examples of such solutions that govern Legendre-transformed
Ricci-flat K\"ahler metrics with no Killing vectors. A similar procedure is
briefly outlined for Husain equation
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