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In mathematics, a weak solution (also called a generalized solution) to an ordinary or partial differential equation is a
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for which the derivatives may not all exist but which is nonetheless deemed to satisfy the equation in some precisely defined sense. There are many different definitions of weak solution, appropriate for different classes of equations. One of the most important is based on the notion of distributions. Avoiding the language of distributions, one starts with a differential equation and rewrites it in such a way that no derivatives of the solution of the equation show up (the new form is called the
weak formulation Weak formulations are important tools for the analysis of mathematical equations that permit the transfer of concepts of linear algebra to solve problems in other fields such as partial differential equations. In a weak formulation, equations or con ...
, and the solutions to it are called weak solutions). Somewhat surprisingly, a differential equation may have solutions which are not
differentiable In mathematics, a differentiable function of one real variable is a function whose derivative exists at each point in its domain. In other words, the graph of a differentiable function has a non-vertical tangent line at each interior point in its ...
; and the weak formulation allows one to find such solutions. Weak solutions are important because many differential equations encountered in modelling real-world phenomena do not admit of sufficiently smooth solutions, and the only way of solving such equations is using the weak formulation. Even in situations where an equation does have differentiable solutions, it is often convenient to first prove the existence of weak solutions and only later show that those solutions are in fact smooth enough.


A concrete example

As an illustration of the concept, consider the first-order
wave equation The (two-way) wave equation is a second-order linear partial differential equation for the description of waves or standing wave fields — as they occur in classical physics — such as mechanical waves (e.g. water waves, sound waves and seism ...
: where ''u'' = ''u''(''t'', ''x'') is a function of two
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variables. To indirectly probe the properties of a possible solution ''u'', one integrates it against an arbitrary smooth function \varphi\,\! of compact support, known as a ''test function,'' taking :\int_^\infty \int_^\infty u(t,x)\,\varphi(t,x)\,dx\,dt For example, if \varphi is a smooth probability distribution concentrated near a point (t, x) = (t_\circ, x_\circ), the integral is approximately u(t_\circ,x_\circ). Notice that while the integrals go from -\infty to \infty, they are essentially over a finite box where \varphi is non-zero. Thus, assume a solution ''u'' is continuously differentiable on the
Euclidean space Euclidean space is the fundamental space of geometry, intended to represent physical space. Originally, that is, in Euclid's ''Elements'', it was the three-dimensional space of Euclidean geometry, but in modern mathematics there are Euclidean ...
R2, multiply the equation () by a test function \varphi (smooth of compact support), and integrate: :\int_^\infty \int_^\infty \frac \varphi (t, x) \, \mathrm t \, \mathrm x +\int_^\infty \int_^\infty \frac \varphi(t,x) \, \mathrmt \, \mathrm x = 0. Using
Fubini's theorem In mathematical analysis Fubini's theorem is a result that gives conditions under which it is possible to compute a double integral by using an iterated integral, introduced by Guido Fubini in 1907. One may switch the order of integration if th ...
which allows one to interchange the order of integration, as well as
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(in ''t'' for the first term and in ''x'' for the second term) this equation becomes: (Boundary terms vanish since \varphi is zero outside a finite box.) We have shown that equation () implies equation () as long as ''u'' is continuously differentiable. The key to the concept of weak solution is that there exist functions ''u'' which satisfy equation () for any \varphi, but such ''u'' may not be differentiable and so cannot satisfy equation (). An example is ''u''(''t'', ''x'') = , ''t'' − ''x'', , as one may check by splitting the integrals over regions ''x'' ≥ ''t'' and ''x'' ≤ ''t'' where ''u'' is smooth'','' and reversing the above computation using integration by parts. A ''weak solution'' of equation () means ''any'' solution ''u'' of equation () over all test functions \varphi.


General case

The general idea which follows from this example is that, when solving a differential equation in ''u'', one can rewrite it using a
test function Distributions, also known as Schwartz distributions or generalized functions, are objects that generalize the classical notion of functions in mathematical analysis. Distributions make it possible to differentiate functions whose derivatives d ...
\varphi, such that whatever derivatives in ''u'' show up in the equation, they are "transferred" via integration by parts to \varphi, resulting in an equation without derivatives of ''u''. This new equation generalizes the original equation to include solutions which are not necessarily differentiable. The approach illustrated above works in great generality. Indeed, consider a linear differential operator in an
open set In mathematics, open sets are a generalization of open intervals in the real line. In a metric space (a set along with a distance defined between any two points), open sets are the sets that, with every point , contain all points that are su ...
''W'' in R''n'': :P(x, \partial)u(x)=\sum a_(x) \, \partial^\partial^\cdots \partial^ u(x), where the
multi-index Multi-index notation is a mathematical notation that simplifies formulas used in multivariable calculus, partial differential equations and the theory of distributions, by generalising the concept of an integer index to an ordered tuple of indices. ...
(''α''1, ''α''2, …, ''α''''n'') varies over some finite set in N''n'' and the coefficients a_ are smooth enough functions of ''x'' in R''n''. The differential equation ''P''(''x'', ''∂'')''u''(''x'') = 0 can, after being multiplied by a smooth test function \varphi with compact support in ''W'' and integrated by parts, be written as :\int_W u(x) Q(x, \partial) \varphi (x) \, \mathrm x=0 where the differential operator ''Q''(''x'', ''∂'') is given by the formula :Q(x, \partial)\varphi (x) = \sum (-1)^ \partial^ \partial^ \cdots \partial^ \left _(x) \varphi(x) \right The number :(-1)^ = (-1)^ shows up because one needs ''α''1 + ''α''2 + ⋯ + ''α''''n'' integrations by parts to transfer all the partial derivatives from ''u'' to \varphi in each term of the differential equation, and each integration by parts entails a multiplication by −1. The differential operator ''Q''(''x'', ''∂'') is the formal adjoint of ''P''(''x'', ''∂'') (cf
adjoint of an operator In mathematics, specifically in operator theory, each linear operator A on a Euclidean vector space defines a Hermitian adjoint (or adjoint) operator A^* on that space according to the rule :\langle Ax,y \rangle = \langle x,A^*y \rangle, where ...
). In summary, if the original (strong) problem was to find a , ''α'', -times differentiable function ''u'' defined on the open set ''W'' such that :P(x, \partial)u(x) = 0 \text x \in W (a so-called strong solution), then an integrable function ''u'' would be said to be a weak solution if :\int_W u(x)\, Q(x, \partial) \varphi (x)\, \mathrm x = 0 for every smooth function \varphi with compact support in ''W''.


Other kinds of weak solution

The notion of weak solution based on distributions is sometimes inadequate. In the case of
hyperbolic system In mathematics, a hyperbolic partial differential equation of order n is a partial differential equation (PDE) that, roughly speaking, has a well-posed initial value problem for the first n-1 derivatives. More precisely, the Cauchy problem can be ...
s, the notion of weak solution based on distributions does not guarantee uniqueness, and it is necessary to supplement it with entropy conditions or some other selection criterion. In fully nonlinear PDE such as the
Hamilton–Jacobi equation In physics, the Hamilton–Jacobi equation, named after William Rowan Hamilton and Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi, is an alternative formulation of classical mechanics, equivalent to other formulations such as Newton's laws of motion, Lagrangian mecha ...
, there is a very different definition of weak solution called viscosity solution.


References

*{{cite book , first=L. C. , last=Evans , title=Partial Differential Equations , publisher=American Mathematical Society , location=Providence , year=1998 , isbn=0-8218-0772-2 Differential equations Generalized functions