234 research outputs found
Do All Integrable Evolution Equations Have the Painlev\'e Property?
We examine whether the Painleve property is necessary for the integrability
of partial differential equations (PDEs). We show that in analogy to what
happens in the case of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) there exists a
class of PDEs, integrable through linearisation, which do not possess the
Painleve property. The same question is addressed in a discrete setting where
we show that there exist linearisable lattice equations which do not possess
the singularity confinement property (again in analogy to the one-dimensional
case).Comment: Published in SIGMA (Symmetry, Integrability and Geometry: Methods and
Applications) at http://www.emis.de/journals/SIGMA
Symmetries of Discrete Systems
In this series of lectures presented at the CIMPA Winter School on Discrete
Integrable Systems in Pondicherry, India, in February, 2003 we give a review of
the application of Lie point symmetries, and their generalizations to the study
of difference equations. The overall theme of these lectures could be called
"continuous symmetries of discrete equations".Comment: 58 pages, 5 figures, Lectures presented at the Winter School on
Discrete Integrable Systems in Pondicherry, India, February 200
The road to the discrete analogue of the Painlevé property: Nevanlinna meets singularity confinement
AbstractThe question of integrability of discrete systems is analyzed in the light of the recent findings of Ablowitz et al., who have conjectured that a fast growth of the solutions of a difference equation is an indication of nonintegrability. The study of the behaviour of the solutions of a mapping is based on the theory of Nevanlinna. In this paper, we show how this approach can be implemented in the case of second-order mappings which include the discrete Painlevé equations. Since the Nevanlinna approach does offer only a necessary condition which is not restrictive enough, we complement it by the singularity confinement requirement, first in an autonomous setting and then for deautonomisation. We believe that this three-tiered approach is the closest one can get to a discrete analogue of the Painlevé property
A Bilinear Approach to Discrete Miura Transformations
We present a systematic approach to the construction of Miura transformations
for discrete Painlev\'e equations. Our method is based on the bilinear
formalism and we start with the expression of the nonlinear discrete equation
in terms of -functions. Elimination of -functions from the
resulting system leads to another nonlinear equation, which is a ``modified''
version of the original equation. The procedure therefore yields Miura
transformations. In this letter, we illustrate this approach by reproducing
previously known Miura transformations and constructing new ones.Comment: 7 pages in TeX, to appear in Phys. Letts.
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