Liouville's equation

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Liouville's equation

\Box u = \exp(u)

in R1 + 1 first arose in the problem of prescribing scalar curvature on a surface. It can be explicitly solved as

 u = \log \frac{8f'(x+t)g'(x-t)}{(f(x+t)+g(x-t))^2},

as was first observed by Liouville.

It is a limiting case of the sinh-gordon equation.

Standard energy methods give GWP in H^1.

Liouville equation turns out to be an equation for a Ricci soliton in R2. This can be seen by noticing that the Ricci flow in this case take the very simple form

 \partial_t\phi=\exp(-2\phi)\triangle\phi.

Then, a Ricci soliton is given by

\triangle u=\Lambda\exp(u)

after having set u = 2φ and Λ being a constant. We have used the fact that in dimension two, a set of isothermal coordinates always exists such that the Riemannian metric takes the simple form g = exp(φ)g0 being g0 the usual Euclidean metric. The equation for the Ricci soliton can be turned back to the original Liouville equation by a \frac{\pi}{2} rotation of one of the coordinates in the complex plane.

See also

References

  1. J. Liouville, Sur l'equation aux differences partielles \partial^2 \ln \lambda /\partial u \partial v \pm 2 \lambda q^2=0, J. Math. Pure Appl. 18(1853), 71--74.