Study of Singular Capillary Surfaces and Development of the Cluster Newton Method

In this thesis, we explore two important aspects of study of differential equations: analytical and computational aspects. We first consider a partial differential equation model for a static liquid surface (capillary surface). We prove through mathematical analyses that the solution of this mathe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Aoki, Yasunori
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6908
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-6908
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-69082013-10-04T04:11:53ZAoki, Yasunori2012-08-29T16:24:30Z2012-08-29T16:24:30Z2012-08-29T16:24:30Z2012http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6908In this thesis, we explore two important aspects of study of differential equations: analytical and computational aspects. We first consider a partial differential equation model for a static liquid surface (capillary surface). We prove through mathematical analyses that the solution of this mathematical model (the Laplace-Young equation) in a cusp domain can be bounded or unbounded depending on the boundary conditions. By utilizing the knowledge we have obtained about the singular behaviour of the solution through mathematical analysis, we then construct a numerical methodology to accurately approximate unbounded solutions of the Laplace-Young equation. Using this accurate numerical methodology, we explore some remaining open problems on singular solutions of the Laplace-Young equation. Lastly, we consider ordinary differential equation models used in the pharmaceutical industry and develop a numerical method for estimating model parameters from incomplete experimental data. With our numerical method, the parameter estimation can be done significantly faster and more robustly than with conventional methods.enPartial Differential EquationsPharmacokineticsLaplace-Young EquationNumerical ApproximationStudy of Singular Capillary Surfaces and Development of the Cluster Newton MethodThesis or DissertationApplied MathematicsDoctor of PhilosophyApplied Mathematics
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Partial Differential Equations
Pharmacokinetics
Laplace-Young Equation
Numerical Approximation
Applied Mathematics
spellingShingle Partial Differential Equations
Pharmacokinetics
Laplace-Young Equation
Numerical Approximation
Applied Mathematics
Aoki, Yasunori
Study of Singular Capillary Surfaces and Development of the Cluster Newton Method
description In this thesis, we explore two important aspects of study of differential equations: analytical and computational aspects. We first consider a partial differential equation model for a static liquid surface (capillary surface). We prove through mathematical analyses that the solution of this mathematical model (the Laplace-Young equation) in a cusp domain can be bounded or unbounded depending on the boundary conditions. By utilizing the knowledge we have obtained about the singular behaviour of the solution through mathematical analysis, we then construct a numerical methodology to accurately approximate unbounded solutions of the Laplace-Young equation. Using this accurate numerical methodology, we explore some remaining open problems on singular solutions of the Laplace-Young equation. Lastly, we consider ordinary differential equation models used in the pharmaceutical industry and develop a numerical method for estimating model parameters from incomplete experimental data. With our numerical method, the parameter estimation can be done significantly faster and more robustly than with conventional methods.
author Aoki, Yasunori
author_facet Aoki, Yasunori
author_sort Aoki, Yasunori
title Study of Singular Capillary Surfaces and Development of the Cluster Newton Method
title_short Study of Singular Capillary Surfaces and Development of the Cluster Newton Method
title_full Study of Singular Capillary Surfaces and Development of the Cluster Newton Method
title_fullStr Study of Singular Capillary Surfaces and Development of the Cluster Newton Method
title_full_unstemmed Study of Singular Capillary Surfaces and Development of the Cluster Newton Method
title_sort study of singular capillary surfaces and development of the cluster newton method
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6908
work_keys_str_mv AT aokiyasunori studyofsingularcapillarysurfacesanddevelopmentoftheclusternewtonmethod
_version_ 1716600911794536448