Multiple scale analysis
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Curator: Carson C. Chow, Laboratory of Biological Modeling, NIDDK, NIH
Multiple-scale analysis is a global perturbation scheme that is useful in systems characterized by disparate time scales, such as weak dissipation in an oscillator. These effects could be insignificant on short time scales but become important on long time scales. Classical perturbation methods generally break down because of resonances that lead to what are called secular terms.
The first scheme to address this problem is what Van Dyke (1975) refers to as the method of strained coordinates. The method is sometimes attributed to Poincare, although Poincare credits the basic idea to the astronomer Lindstedt (Kevorkian and Cole, 1996). Lighthill introduced a more general version in 1949. Later Krylov and Bogoliubov and Kevorkian and Cole introduced the two-scale expansion, which is now the more standard approach.
Contents |
Secular growth
The classic oft-used example (Bender and Orszag, 1999; Kevorkian and Cole, 1996) for the use of muliple-scale analysis is the weakly nonlinear Duffing oscillator given by
- (1)
with boundary conditions
and
and the positive parameter
. Although the Duffing
oscillator can be solved exactly in terms of elliptical functions, it
serves as a paradigmatic example for demonstrating multiple-scale analysis.
First consider standard perturbation theory where it is assumed that an expansion in a power series
- (2)
exists
where
,
,
,
. The implicit
assumption is that (2) is an asymptotic expansion so
that the
th
term becomes arbitrarily small compared to the
th term as
.
Substituting the expansion (2) into (1) and
equating coefficients of like powers of
, gives for the
first two orders of
:
The solution to (3) that satisfies the boundary conditions
is
. Hence, (4) becomes
- (5)
where the identity
is used.
The general solution to (5) is then given by
- (6)
Hence, the first order perturbative solution to the Duffing oscillator is given by
- (7)
An examination of (7) shows that the perturbation theory
will break down when
since
will
be of the same order as
and violate the uniformity of the
convergence of the asymptotic expansion.
This
dependence in
is known as secular growth and arises
whenever there is a resonance between
and
.
At this point it should be noted that the secular growth is entirely
an artifact of the perturbation scheme. The Duffing oscillator
(1) is well behaved and always remains bounded. This
can be seen from the fact that it contains a conserved quantity.
Multiplying (1) by
converts the equation
into a total derivative and integrating gives
- (8)
The use of the symbol
is deliberate since the Duffing oscillator
is a Hamiltonian system with total energy
given by (8).
Motivation for multiple-scale analysis
So why does the perturbation expansion breakdown? The
resolution is that the individual terms in the sum may be secular
but the sum remains bounded. For the Duffing oscillator, the lowest
order effect of the cubic term is to distort the
frequency so a more appropriate approximation would be of the form
where
is a constant.
Substituting this ansatz into (1) yields
Equating terms order by order in
gives
and
thus
would be the
expected lowest
order approximation to the solution of the Duffing oscillator.
Two-scale expansion
The ad hoc procedure of obtaining an ansatz to use can be made
systematic using a two-scale expansion. The trick is to introduce a
new variable
. This variable is called the slow time because it
does not become significant until
. Then take an
expansion of the form
- (9)
Using the chain rule this implies
Since
then
- (10)
Substituting (9) into (1) using (10) and
equating terms of like powers of
gives
The general real solution to (11) is
- (13)
Substituting (13) into (12) gives
- (14)
To ensure that there are no secular terms in
, the
resonant terms on the right hand side of (14) are forced to be
zero, i.e.
Set
, insert into (15) or
(16) and
equate real and imaginary parts to obtain
- (17)
Hence
and
giving
Applying the initial conditions gives
and
giving the approximation
Higher order terms in the expansion can be generated similarly by
systematically eliminating secular terms at each order to produce a
uniform perturbation expansion.
A more general two-scale scheme uses for the fast time scale the form
. This more general scheme will
only differ from the simpler scheme when going beyond first order.
References
- C. M. Bender and S. A. Orzag,Advanced Mathematical Methods for Scientists and Engineers, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1999.
- J. Kevorkian and J. D. Cole, Multiple Scale and Singular Perturbation Methods, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1996.
See also
Boundary Layer Theory, Perturbation Methods, Singular Perturbation Theory, WKB Theory
| Carson C. Chow (2007) Multiple scale analysis. Scholarpedia, 2(10):1617, (go to the first approved version) Created: 26 May 2006, reviewed: 19 August 2007, accepted: 23 October 2007 |
| Action editor: | Dr. Eugene M. Izhikevich, Editor-in-Chief of Scholarpedia, the peer-reviewed open-access encyclopedia |


