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      Dispersive shock waves and modulation theory

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          Abstract

          There is growing physical and mathematical interest in the hydrodynamics of dissipationless/dispersive media. Since G.~B.~Whitham's seminal publication fifty years ago that ushered in the mathematical study of dispersive hydrodynamics, there has been a significant body of work in this area. However, there has been no comprehensive survey of the field of dispersive hydrodynamics. Utilizing Whitham's averaging theory as the primary mathematical tool, we review the rich mathematical developments over the past fifty years with an emphasis on physical applications. The fundamental, large scale, coherent excitation in dispersive hydrodynamic systems is an expanding, oscillatory dispersive shock wave or DSW. Both the macroscopic and microscopic properties of DSWs are analyzed in detail within the context of the universal, integrable, and foundational models for uni-directional (Korteweg-de Vries equation) and bi-directional (Nonlinear Schr\"{o}dinger equation) dispersive hydrodynamics. A DSW fitting procedure that does not rely upon integrable structure yet reveals important macroscopic DSW properties is described. DSW theory is then applied to a number of physical applications: superfluids, nonlinear optics, geophysics, and fluid dynamics. Finally, we survey some of the more recent developments including non-classical DSWs, DSW interactions, DSWs in perturbed and inhomogeneous environments, and two-dimensional, oblique DSWs.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                2016-02-19
                2016-04-12
                Article
                10.1016/j.physd.2016.04.006
                1602.06163
                cb07d3b2-86ca-4013-842e-276611930dbc

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                review article, 68 pages, 52 figures
                nlin.PS nlin.SI physics.flu-dyn

                Thermal physics & Statistical mechanics,Nonlinear & Complex systems
                Thermal physics & Statistical mechanics, Nonlinear & Complex systems

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