The Dissipative Effect of Caputo--Time-Fractional Derivatives and its Implications for the Solutions of Nonlinear Wave Equations
Tassos Bountis, Julia Cantis\'an, Jes\'us Cuevas-Maraver, J. E., Mac\'ias-D\'iaz, Panayotis G. Kevrekidis

TL;DR
This paper investigates how Caputo time-fractional derivatives introduce artificial dissipation in nonlinear wave equations, affecting breather solutions and suggesting new directions for studying topological solitary waves.
Contribution
It reveals the dissipative effects of Caputo derivatives on nonlinear wave solutions and compares these effects with linear and nonlinear oscillators, providing insights into fractional PDE dynamics.
Findings
Caputo derivatives cause artificial dissipation in breather waves
Dissipation depends on the fractional order between 1 and 2
Counteracting mechanisms like anti-damping are considered
Abstract
In honor of the great Russian mathematician A. N. Kolmogorov, we would like to draw attention in the present paper to a curious mathematical observation concerning fractional differential equations describing physical systems, whose time evolution for integer derivatives has a time-honored conservative form. This observation, although known to the general mathematical community, has not, in our view, been satisfactorily addressed. More specifically, we follow the recent exploration of Caputo-Riesz time-space-fractional nonlinear wave equation, in which two of the present authors introduced an energy-type functional and proposed a finite-difference scheme to approximate the solutions of the continuous model. The relevant Klein-Gordon equation considered here has the form: \begin{equation} \frac {\partial ^\beta \phi (x , t)} {\partial t ^\beta} - \Delta ^\alpha \phi (x , t) + F ^\prime…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFractional Differential Equations Solutions · Differential Equations and Numerical Methods · Numerical methods for differential equations
