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1.2.5 Moments and conservation laws
Slide : [ moments
elliptic -
parabolic -
hyperbolic || local
dispersion relation ||
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Differential calculus is at the heart of science and engineering because
it describes interactions locally, relating infinitesimal changes at the
microscopic scale to the macroscopic behavior a system.
At the macroscopic scale, global quantities can be found that remain
constant in spite of the microscopic changes: the total density, the
momentum and the energy inside a closed box that is isolated from the
outside world do not change.
Conservation laws can in general be constructed by taking moments
in phase space
, where the moment of order
a function
is
defined by the integral
 |
(1.2.5#eq.1) |
Usually,
refers to the total density,
the total momentum and
the total energy in the system.
Conservation laws provide useful self-consistency checks when PDEs are
solved in an approximate manner with the computer: deviations from the
initial value are a clear signal for the loss of accuracy in a numerical
solution that evolves in time.
SYLLABUS Previous: 1.2.4 Characteristics and dispersion
Up: 1.2 Differential Equations
Next: 1.3 Prototype problems
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