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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, a Cauchy () boundary condition augments an ordinary differential equation or a
partial differential equation In mathematics, a partial differential equation (PDE) is an equation which imposes relations between the various partial derivatives of a Multivariable calculus, multivariable function. The function is often thought of as an "unknown" to be sol ...
with conditions that the solution must satisfy on the boundary; ideally so as to ensure that a unique solution exists. A Cauchy boundary condition specifies both the function value and normal derivative on the boundary of the domain. This corresponds to imposing both a Dirichlet and a Neumann boundary condition. It is named after the prolific 19th-century French mathematical analyst
Augustin-Louis Cauchy Baron Augustin-Louis Cauchy (, ; ; 21 August 178923 May 1857) was a French mathematician, engineer, and physicist who made pioneering contributions to several branches of mathematics, including mathematical analysis and continuum mechanics. He ...
.


Second-order ordinary differential equations

Cauchy boundary conditions are simple and common in second-order
ordinary differential equations In mathematics, an ordinary differential equation (ODE) is a differential equation whose unknown(s) consists of one (or more) function(s) of one variable and involves the derivatives of those functions. The term ''ordinary'' is used in contrast w ...
, :y''(s) = f\big(y(s), y'(s), s\big), where, in order to ensure that a unique solution y(s) exists, one may specify the value of the function y and the value of the derivative y' at a given point s=a, i.e., :y(a) = \alpha, and :y'(a) = \beta, where a is a boundary or initial point. Since the parameter s is usually time, Cauchy conditions can also be called ''initial value conditions'' or ''initial value data'' or simply ''Cauchy data''. An example of such a situation is Newton's laws of motion, where the acceleration y'' depends on position y, velocity y', and the time s; here, Cauchy data corresponds to knowing the initial position and velocity.


Partial differential equations

For partial differential equations, Cauchy boundary conditions specify both the function and the normal derivative on the boundary. To make things simple and concrete, consider a second-order differential equation in the plane :A(x,y) \psi_ + B(x,y) \psi_ + C(x,y) \psi_ = F(x,y,\psi,\psi_x,\psi_y), where \psi(x,y) is the unknown solution, \psi_x denotes derivative of \psi with respect to x etc. The functions A, B, C, F specify the problem. We now seek a \psi that satisfies the partial differential equation in a domain \Omega, which is a subset of the xy plane, and such that the Cauchy boundary conditions :\psi(x,y) = \alpha(x,y), \quad \mathbf \cdot \nabla\psi = \beta(x,y) hold for all boundary points (x,y) \in \partial\Omega. Here \mathbf \cdot \nabla\psi is the derivative in the direction of the normal to the boundary. The functions \alpha and \beta are the Cauchy data. Notice the difference between a Cauchy boundary condition and a Robin boundary condition. In the former, we specify both the function and the normal derivative. In the latter, we specify a weighted average of the two. We would like boundary conditions to ensure that exactly one (unique) solution exists, but for second-order partial differential equations, it is not as simple to guarantee existence and uniqueness as it is for ordinary differential equations. Cauchy data are most immediately relevant for hyperbolic problems (for example, the wave equation) on open domains (for example, the half plane).


See also

* Dirichlet boundary condition * Mixed boundary condition * Neumann boundary condition * Robin boundary condition


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Cauchy Boundary Condition Boundary conditions