Hunter–Saxton equation

In mathematical physics, the Hunter–Saxton equation[1]

is an integrable PDE that arises in the theoretical study of nematic liquid crystals. If the molecules in the liquid crystal are initially all aligned, and some of them are then wiggled slightly, this disturbance in orientation will propagate through the crystal, and the Hunter–Saxton equation describes certain aspects of such orientation waves.

Physical background

In the models for liquid crystals considered here, it is assumed that there is no fluid flow, so that only the orientation of the molecules is of interest. Within the elastic continuum theory, the orientation is described by a field of unit vectors n(x,y,z,t). For nematic liquid crystals, there is no difference between orienting a molecule in the n direction or in the n direction, and the vector field n is then called a director field. The potential energy density of a director field is usually assumed to be given by the OseenFrank energy functional [2]

where the positive coefficients , , are known as the elastic coefficients of splay, twist, and bend, respectively. The kinetic energy is often neglected because of the high viscosity of liquid crystals.

Derivation of the Hunter–Saxton equation

Hunter and Saxton[1] investigated the case when viscous damping is ignored and a kinetic energy term is included in the model. Then the governing equations for the dynamics of the director field are the Euler–Lagrange equations for the Lagrangian

where is a Lagrange multiplier corresponding to the constraint |n|=1. They restricted their attention to "splay waves" where the director field takes the special form

This assumption reduces the Lagrangian to

and then the Euler–Lagrange equation for the angle φ becomes

There are trivial constant solutions φ=φ0 corresponding to states where the molecules in the liquid crystal are perfectly aligned. Linearization around such an equilibrium leads to the linear wave equation which allows wave propagation in both directions with speed , so the nonlinear equation can be expected to behave similarly. In order to study right-moving waves for large t, one looks for asymptotic solutions of the form

where

Inserting this into the equation, one finds at the order that

A simple renaming and rescaling of the variables (assuming that ) transforms this into the Hunter–Saxton equation.

Generalization

The analysis was later generalized by Alì and Hunter,[3] who allowed the director field to point in any direction, but with the spatial dependence still only in the x direction:

Then the Lagrangian is

The corresponding Euler–Lagrange equations are coupled nonlinear wave equations for the angles φ and ψ, with φ corresponding to "splay waves" and ψ to "twist waves". The previous Hunter–Saxton case (pure splay waves) is recovered by taking ψ constant, but one can also consider coupled splay-twist waves where both φ and ψ vary. Asymptotic expansions similar to that above lead to a system of equations, which, after renaming and rescaling the variables, takes the form

where u is related to φ and v to ψ. This system implies[4] that u satisfies

so (rather remarkably) the Hunter–Saxton equation arises in this context too, but in a different way.

Variational structures and integrability

The integrability of the Hunter–Saxton equation, or, more precisely, that of its x derivative

was shown by Hunter and Zheng,[5] who exploited that this equation is obtained from the Camassa–Holm equation

in the "high frequency limit"

Applying this limiting procedure to a Lagrangian for the Camassa–Holm equation, they obtained a Lagrangian

which produces the Hunter–Saxton equation after elimination of v and w from the Euler–Lagrange equations for u, v, w. Since there is also the more obvious Lagrangian

the Hunter–Saxton has two inequivalent variational structures. Hunter and Zheng also obtained a bihamiltonian formulation and a Lax pair from the corresponding structures for the Camassa–Holm equation in a similar way.

The fact that the Hunter–Saxton equation arises physically in two different ways (as shown above) was used by Alì and Hunter[3] to explain why it has this bivariational (or bihamiltonian) structure.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Hunter & Saxton 1991
  2. de Gennes & Prost 1994 (Ch. 3)
  3. 1 2 Alì & Hunter 2006
  4. Differentiate the second equation with respect to t, substitute vxt from the first equation, and eliminate v using the second equation again.
  5. Hunter & Zheng 1994

References

Further reading

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