20
Partial differential equations:
general and particular solutions
In this chapter and the next the solution of differential equations of types
typically encountered in the physical sciences and engineering is extended to
situations involving more than one independent variable. A partial differential
equation (PDE) is an equation relating an unknown function (the dependent
variable) of two or more variables to its partial derivatives with respect to
those variables. The most commonly occurring independent variables are those
describing position and time, and so we will couch our discussion and examples
in notation appropriate to them.
As in other chapters we will focus our attention on the equations that arise
most often in physical situations. We will restrict our discussion, therefore, to
linear PDEs, i.e. those of first degree in the dependent variable. Furthermore, we
will discuss primarily second-order equations. The solution of first-order PDEs
will necessarily be involved in treating these, and some of the methods discussed
can be extended without difficulty to third- and higher-order equations. We shall
also see that many ideas developed for ordinary differential equations (ODEs)
can be carried over directly into the study of PDEs.
In this chapter we will concentrate on general solutions of PDEs in terms
of arbitrary functions and the particular solutions that may be derived from
them in the presence of boundary conditions. We also discuss the existence and
uniqueness of the solutions to PDEs under given boundary conditions.
In the next chapter the methods most commonly used in practice for obtaining
solutions to PDEs subject to given boundary conditions will be considered. These
methods include the separation of variables, integral transforms and Green’s
functions. This division of material is rather arbitrary and has been made only
to emphasise the general usefulness of the latter methods. In particular, it will
be readily apparent that some of the results of the present chapter are in
fact solutions in the form of separated variables, but arrived at by a different
approach.