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Applied singular integral equations / B.N. Mandal, A. Chakrabarti.

By: Mandal, B. NContributor(s): Chakrabarti, A. (Aloknath)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Enfield, NH : Boca Raton, FL : Science Publishers ; Marketed and distributed by CRC Press, c2011. Description: ix, 264 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN: 9781578087105 (hardback)Subject(s): Mathematics | Integral equations | Mathematical physics | MATHEMATICS / Applied | MATHEMATICS / Differential EquationsDDC classification: 515.45 Summary: "Integral equations occur in a natural way in the course of obtaining mathematical solutions to mixed boundary value problems of mathematical physics. Of the many possible approaches to the reduction of a given mixed boundary value problem to an integral equation, Green's function technique appears to be the most useful one, and Green's functions involving elliptic operators (e.g., Laplace's equation) in two variables, are known to possess logarithmic singularities. The existence of singularities in the Green's function associated with a given boundary value problem, thus, brings in singularities in the kernels of the resulting integral equations to be analyzed in order to obtain useful solutions of the boundary value problems under consideration. The present book is devoted to varieties of linear singular integral equations, with special emphasis on their methods of solution and helps in introducing the subject of singular integral equations and their applications to researchers as well as graduate students of this fascinating and growing branch of applied mathematics. "--
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REFERENCE Malaviya National Institute of Technology
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515.45 MAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 87558

Includes bibliographical references (p. [257]-261) and index.

"Integral equations occur in a natural way in the course of obtaining mathematical solutions to mixed boundary value problems of mathematical physics. Of the many possible approaches to the reduction of a given mixed boundary value problem to an integral equation, Green's function technique appears to be the most useful one, and Green's functions involving elliptic operators (e.g., Laplace's equation) in two variables, are known to possess logarithmic singularities. The existence of singularities in the Green's function associated with a given boundary value problem, thus, brings in singularities in the kernels of the resulting integral equations to be analyzed in order to obtain useful solutions of the boundary value problems under consideration. The present book is devoted to varieties of linear singular integral equations, with special emphasis on their methods of solution and helps in introducing the subject of singular integral equations and their applications to researchers as well as graduate students of this fascinating and growing branch of applied mathematics. "--

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