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MIT OpenCourseWarehttp://ocw.mit.edu 18.306 Advanced Partial Differential Equations with ApplicationsFall 2009 For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms.Lecture 17 2009 11 04 WED TOPICS: Eikonal. Focusing and caustics. Description of the caustic. Breakdown of approximation. Derivation of amplitude equation. Characteristics for H(u, p, q, x, y) = 0; crossings and multiple values. Example: Eikonal. Focusing of convex wave-fronts and caustics. Caustics as edge of the multiple-values region. Caustics as envelope of the rays. Caustics as the locus of the centers of curvature of the wave front. Typical form for caustic. Cusp at location of the first ray to focus. Multiple-values not a problem: can have multiple waves at any given place. However: as wavefronts approach the caustic, the expansion breaks down. Wavelength no longer shorter than all other length scales: wave front develops large curvature as it approaches caustic. Hence: need another approximation near caustic. Derivation of equation for amplitude A. Conservation of energy (A^2) and blow up at caustics. Energy moves along rays at speed c. Characteristic form of the equation for the evolution of the


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MIT 18 306 - 18 306 Lecture 17

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