AcademyPartial Differential Equations

Academy

Important PDEs

Level 1 - Math II (Physics) topic page in Partial Differential Equations.

Principle

Important PDEs is about recognising the wave, heat, Laplace, and Poisson equations. The page treats the idea as a local tool: identify the variables, state the assumptions, then apply the relevant formula or theorem.

PDEs model fields depending on several inputs, such as waves on a string, heat in a material, and electric potential in space.

Notation

\(x,t\)
independent variable or variables for this topic
\(u(x,t)\)
main dependent quantity, field, or function being studied
\(parameter\)
constant that sets a scale, rate, coefficient, or boundary value
\(domain\)
set of input values where the formula or model is used

Method

Step 1: State the object being studied

Name the function, field, signal, or region. State its domain and the units of the physical quantities before doing any algebra or calculus.

Step 2: Apply the central relation

Use the defining relation for Important PDEs:

Wave equation
\[u_{tt}=c^2u_{xx}\]
Name the task
\[Important PDEs\]
Use the central relation
\[u_{tt}=c^2u_{xx}\]
Interpret the result
\[Wave equation\]

Step 3: Interpret the result

Translate the mathematical output back into the physical setting. Check whether it represents a rate, amplitude, density, source strength, boundary value, or approximation.

Rules

Wave equation
\[u_{tt}=c^2u_{xx}\]
Domain reminder
\[\text{formula applies on the stated domain}\]
Units reminder
\[\text{units must balance on both sides}\]

Examples

Question
Identify the central relation for Important PDEs.
Answer
The central relation is Wave equation: u_{tt}=c^2u_{xx}. Use it after naming the variables and checking the assumptions.

Checks

  • Each important PDE encodes a different physical balance.
  • Define every variable before substituting numbers or interpreting a graph.
  • Check units, domain restrictions, and sign conventions before trusting the result.