Paper 3, Section II, B

Methods | Part IB, 2016

(a) Show that the Fourier transform of f(x)=ea2x2f(x)=e^{-a^{2} x^{2}}, for a>0a>0, is

f~(k)=πaek24a2,\tilde{f}(k)=\frac{\sqrt{\pi}}{a} e^{-\frac{k^{2}}{4 a^{2}}},

stating clearly any properties of the Fourier transform that you use.

[Hint: You may assume that 0et2dt=π/2\int_{0}^{\infty} e^{-t^{2}} d t=\sqrt{\pi} / 2.]

(b) Consider now the Cauchy problem for the diffusion equation in one space dimension, i.e. solving for θ(x,t)\theta(x, t) satisfying:

θt=D2θx2 with θ(x,0)=g(x)\frac{\partial \theta}{\partial t}=D \frac{\partial^{2} \theta}{\partial x^{2}} \quad \text { with } \theta(x, 0)=g(x)

where DD is a positive constant and g(x)g(x) is specified. Consider the following property of a solution:

Property P: If the initial data g(x)g(x) is positive and it is non-zero only within a bounded region (i.e. there is a constant α\alpha such that θ(x,0)=0\theta(x, 0)=0 for all x>α)|x|>\alpha), then for any ϵ>0\epsilon>0 (however small) and β\beta (however large) the solution θ(β,ϵ)\theta(\beta, \epsilon) can be non-zero, i.e. the solution can become non-zero arbitrarily far away after an arbitrarily short time.

Does Property P hold for solutions of the diffusion equation? Justify your answer (deriving any expression for the solution θ(x,t)\theta(x, t) that you use).

(c) Consider now the wave equation in one space dimension:

2ut2=c22ux2\frac{\partial^{2} u}{\partial t^{2}}=c^{2} \frac{\partial^{2} u}{\partial x^{2}}

with given initial data u(x,0)=ϕ(x)u(x, 0)=\phi(x) and ut(x,0)=0\frac{\partial u}{\partial t}(x, 0)=0 (and cc is a constant).

Does Property P\mathrm{P} (with g(x)g(x) and θ(β,ϵ)\theta(\beta, \epsilon) now replaced by ϕ(x)\phi(x) and u(β,ϵ)u(\beta, \epsilon) respectively) hold for solutions of the wave equation? Justify your answer again as above.

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