Abstract
The phrase solotone effect refers to a persistent irregular pattern within a set of eigenvalues. This effect arises when the underlying differential equations contain discontinuities. Models of the Earth contain such discontinuities and research into solotones was originally motivated by vibration problems in geophysics. More recently, solotone effects have been discovered within heat conduction, and within quantum wells. However, at present, only one-dimensional arrangements have been shown to give rise to a solotone effect. In this paper, we compute the eigenvalues of an inhomogeneous vibrating rectangular membrane. The resulting eigenspectra, when taken as a whole, fail to display a solotone effect. Nevertheless, we show that irregular patterns do exist within selected subsets of eigenvalues. Our analysis therefore provides the first example of a solotone effect in a spatial dimension greater than one. Furthermore, this discovery could be used to extend the solotone inverse method already implemented in one dimension.
A The Galerkin method
Throughout this paper we consider a special case of the eigenvalue problem
defined over a region R. Here u is a function of three spatial variables x, y and z. We shall assume that
To derive the weak formulation of equation (A.1) we multiply the partial differential equation and second boundary condition by a smooth arbitrary function Φ, which we assume is zero on
Equation (A.2) is called the weak formulation of equation (A.1).
The Galerkin method attempts to approximate the eigenvectors and eigenvalues of equation (A.1) by replacing u in equation (A.2) with the weighted sum
Thus
where each
We can write this system of M equations more compactly as
where
and
Alternatively, using matrices,
We now consider the special case
Furthermore, equation (A.1) becomes
This is the partial differential equation discussed in Section 3.
B A coarse grid example
The finite element method we will now be illustrated by estimating the smallest eigenvalue of equation (A.1). To achieve this we define R to be the rectangular region shown in Figure 6 but with dimensions
A homogeneous two-dimensional rectangular region subdivided using a coarse grid.
The smallest eigenvalue will be approximated using equations (A.5), (A.8) and (A.9). In our case
Functions

View from above.

View from the side.
Performing the necessary integration leads to the following generalised matrix eigenvalue problem:
This problem may be solved using the computer algebra system Maple. In doing so we estimate the smallest eigenvalue of equation (A.1) to be 3.3118. The exact value, calculated using equation (3.5) with
Maple also returns values for
Acknowledgements
The author of this paper wishes to thank Granville Sewell, the author of PDE2D. Professor Sewell provided invaluable advice during the modification of PDE2D Interactive Driver Example 3.
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Boundary determination for hybrid imaging from a single measurement
- The inverse problem of heat conduction in the case of non-uniqueness: A functional identification approach
- Well-posedness and Tikhonov regularization of an inverse source problem for a parabolic equation with an integral constraint
- CT image restoration method via total variation and L 0 smoothing filter
- A weakly inhomogeneous vibrating membrane and the solotone effect in two dimensions
- A physics-inspired neural network for short-wave radiation parameterization
- Inverse problem for Sturm–Liouville operator with complex-valued weight and eigenparameter dependent boundary conditions
- The high-order estimate of the entire function associated with inverse Sturm–Liouville problems
- Inverse spectral problem for differential pencils with a frozen argument
- Curious ill-posedness phenomena in the composition of non-compact linear operators in Hilbert spaces
- M. M. Lavrentiev-type systems and reconstructing parameters of viscoelastic media
- Application of locally regularized extremal shift to the problem of realization of a prescribed motion
- The overdetermined Cauchy problem for the hyperbolic Gellerstedt equation
- The group behavior analysis of the high-frequency traders based on Mean Field Games approach