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To solve the Dirichlet problem on an annulus, I do the following in 12.2 on Windows 10 Pro

ClearAll["Global`*"];
leqn =  Laplacian[u[r, θ], {r, θ}, "Polar"] == 0;
bc1 = u[1, θ] == Sin[θ];
bc2 = u[3, θ] == Sin[6 θ]^2;
sol = DSolve[{leqn, bc1, bc2}, u[r, θ], {r, θ}]

and this produces an incorrect result $$\left\{\left\{u(r,\theta )\to \begin{array}{cc} \{ & \begin{array}{cc} \frac{1}{8} \left(\frac{4 \log (r)}{\log (3)}+\left(\frac{9}{r}-r\right) \sin (\theta )\right) & 1\leq r\leq 3 \\ \text{Indeterminate} & \text{True} \\ \end{array} \\ \end{array} \right\}\right\} $$ , whereas it should be $u \left( r,\theta \right) ={\frac { \left( -531441\,{r}^{24}+531441 \right) \log \left( 3 \right) \cos \left( 12\,\theta \right) - 70607384120\,{r}^{11} \left( \sin \left( \theta \right) \left( {r}^{2 }-9 \right) \log \left( 3 \right) -4\,r\log \left( r \right) \right) }{564859072960\,{r}^{12}\log \left( 3 \right) }}$

The exact solution can be found as a series, following these lectures, but that is a long way.

Let us try the numeric solution of the problem under consideration

nsol = NDSolve[{leqn, bc1, bc2}, u, {r, 1, 3}, {θ, 0, 2*Pi}]
(*{{u->InterpolatingFunction[Domain: {{1.,3.},{0.,6.28}} Output: scalar ]}}*)

Nice. However, when plotting it, one gets face to face with troubles. The command

ParametricPlot3D[{r *Cos[θ], r* Sin[θ],Evaluate[u[r, θ] /. nsol]}, {r, 1, 3}, {θ, 0, 2*Pi}]

produces an empty plot, the commands

ListPlot3D[Partition[Flatten[Table[{r*Cos[θ], r*Sin[θ], 
 u[r, θ] /. nsol},{r, 1, 3, 0.05},{θ, N[0, 25], 
 N[2*Pi, 25], N[2*Pi, 25]/120}]], 3]]

enter image description here and

ListPointPlot3D[Partition[Flatten[Table[{r*Cos[θ], r*Sin[θ], 
 u[r, θ] /. nsol}, {r, 1, 3, 0.05}, {θ, N[0, 25], 
 N[2*Pi, 25], N[2*Pi, 25]/120}]], 3]]

enter image description here

work, but these show a break at the ray $\theta=0$ (Indeed, u[2., 0.01] /. nsol performs {0.454836} and u[2., 6.28 - 0.01] /. nsol results in {0.168936}.), whereas the solution is a twice-differentiable function on the annulus. The change of the interval {θ, 0, 2*Pi} by {θ, -Pi, Pi} does not help.

My questions are: can the exact solution in a series form be transformed to a closed-form expression? can the break of the numeric solution be removed by options of NDSolve?

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    $\begingroup$ You need to add the periodic b.c. in $\theta$ direction. $\endgroup$
    – xzczd
    Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 8:42
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ @xzczd: Can you elaborate your comment? TIA. $\endgroup$
    – user64494
    Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 8:45
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ @xzczd: Both bc1 and bc2are periodic functions with period 2*Pi. Are you serious? $\endgroup$
    – user64494
    Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 9:08
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ Of course I'm serious. bc1 and bc2 only indicate the solution is periodic at $r=1$ and $r=3$. $\endgroup$
    – xzczd
    Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 9:16
  • 3
    $\begingroup$ xzczd's point is that you only told NDSolve[] that your function over an annulus is periodic at the boundaries, but not within the annulus itself. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 10:04

1 Answer 1

12
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3 issues here, I'll start from the simplest one.

First of all, to solve the problem inside an annulus, you need to tell NDSolve you're solving inside an annulus in some way. The simplest approach is to stay in Cartesian coordinate and choose a Annulus[…] region:

nsolref = NDSolveValue[{Laplacian[u[x, y], {x, y}] == 0, 
   DirichletCondition[u[x, y] == Sin[ArcTan[x, y]], x^2 + y^2 == 1], 
   DirichletCondition[u[x, y] == Sin[6 ArcTan[x, y]]^2, x^2 + y^2 == 3^2]}, 
  u, {x, y} ∈ Annulus[{0, 0}, {1, 3}]]

Plot3D[nsolref[x, y], {x, y} ∈ Annulus[{0, 0}, {1, 3}], PlotPoints -> 100]

enter image description here

If you want to stay in polar coordinate, you need to tell NDSolve the region is periodic in $\theta$ direction, and here comes the second issue. As discussed in this post, we need to use TriangleElement and add 2 PeriodicBoundaryCondition[……] to NDSolve to keep the derivative periodic:

nsol = NDSolveValue[{leqn, bc1, bc2, 
   PeriodicBoundaryCondition[u[r, θ], θ == 2 π && 1 < r < 3, 
    TranslationTransform[{0, -2 Pi}]], 
   PeriodicBoundaryCondition[u[r, θ], θ == 0 && 1 < r < 3, 
    TranslationTransform[{0, 2 Pi}]]}, u, {r, 1, 3}, {θ, 0, 2 Pi}, 
  Method -> {FiniteElement, 
    MeshOptions -> {MaxCellMeasure -> 0.001, MeshElementType -> TriangleElement}}]

RevolutionPlot3D[nsol[r, th], {r, 1, 3}, {th, 0, 2 Pi}, PlotPoints -> 50]

enter image description here

As to the analytic solution, it's a pity DSolve can't solve the problem at the moment:

DSolve[{leqn, bc1, bc2, u[r, 0] == u[r, 2 Pi]}, 
 u[r, θ], {r, 1, 3}, {θ, 0, 2 Pi}]
(* Input returned. *)

So I'll use the finite Fourier transform to solve the problem as I've done here. If you still think this method is built on the sand, please ignore this part of the answer:

generateteq[n_] := 
 finiteFourierTransform[{leqn, bc1, bc2}, {θ, 0, 2 Pi}, n] /. 
    a_[r, 0] -> a[r, 2 Pi] /. finiteFourierTransform[a_, __] -> a /. u -> (U[#] &)

teqgeneral = generateteq[n]    
tsolgeneral = DSolveValue[teqgeneral, U[r], r, Assumptions -> n > 0]

teq0 = generateteq[0]    
tsol0 = DSolveValue[teq0, U[r], r]

teq1 = generateteq[1]    
tsol1 = DSolveValue[teq1, U[r], r]

teq12 = generateteq[12]    
tsol12 = DSolveValue[teq12, U[r], r]

asol[r_, θ_] = 
 inverseFiniteFourierTransform[
      Piecewise[{{tsol0, n == 0}, {tsol1, n == 1}, {tsol12, n == 12}}], 
      n, {θ, 0, 2 Pi}, Re] /. C -> 12 // ReleaseHold // ComplexExpand // 
  Simplify[#, r > 0] &
(*
-((531441 (-1 + r^24) Cos[12 θ])/(564859072960 r^12)) + Log[r]/
 Log[9] - ((-9 + r^2) Sin[θ])/(8 r)
 *)
ref[r_, θ_] = ((531441 - 531441 r^24) Cos[12 θ] Log[3] - 
    70607384120 r^11 (-4 r Log[r] + (-9 + r^2) Log[
         3] Sin[θ]))/(564859072960 r^12 Log[3])

asol[r, th] == ref[r, th] // Simplify
(* True *)

In this method, the finite Fourier transforms of {leqn, bc1, bc2} when $n=0,1,12$ are calculated separately, because finiteFourierTransform, which is based on Integrate, isn't able to handle these special cases properly, at least up to v12.2. (Still confused? Just observe the output of Integrate[Sin[x] Sin[n x], {x, 0, 2 Pi}]. )

Finally, a comparison for the 4 solutions:

Manipulate[Plot[{nsol[r, θ], nsolref[r Cos@θ, r Sin@θ] + 0.01, 
   asol[r, θ] + 0.02, ref[r, θ] + 0.03}, {r, 1, 3}, 
  PlotRange -> 1], {θ, 0, 2 Pi}]

enter image description here


Update

Just find something funny. If we transform bc2 with TrigReduce:

bc2 = u[3, θ] == Sin[6 θ]^2 // TrigReduce
(* u[3, θ] == 1/2 (1 - Cos[12 θ]) *)

DSolve finds the desired result, at least in v12.2:

sol = DSolve[{leqn, bc1, bc2}, u[r, θ], {r, θ}, Assumptions -> 1 <= r <= 3][[1]]
(*
{u[r, θ] -> -((531441 (-1 + r^24) Cos[12 θ])/(564859072960 r^12)) + Log[r]/
   Log[9] - ((-9 + r^2) Sin[θ])/(8 r)}
 *)

However, this may be a coincidence. Though not explicitly documented, according to the examples in the document of DSolve, when b.c. in certain direction is missing, it seems that DSolve will simply assume the problem is defined in an unbounded domain i.e. perhaps DSolve has assumed $θ∈(−∞,+∞)$ in this case.

Let's verify the guess. Suppose $θ∈(−∞,+∞)$ and the solution is finite, then a standard technique to eliminate derivative of $\theta$ is to apply FourierTransform in $\theta$ direction. I'll use the ft defined in this post to facilitate the coding:

(* Definition of ft isn't included in this post,
   please find it in the link above. *)
tset = ft[{leqn, bc1, bc2}, θ, w] /. HoldPattern@FourierTransform[a_, __] :> a

tsol = DSolve[tset, u[r, θ], r][[1, 1, -1]]

solFourier = 
 1/Sqrt[2 Pi] Integrate[tsol Exp[-I w θ], {w, -Infinity, Infinity}] // FullSimplify

(*
1/8 ((4 Log[r])/Log[3] + (9/r - r) Sin[θ] - 
   4 Cos[12 θ] Csch[12 Log[3]] Sinh[12 Log[r]])
 *)

ref[r, θ] == solFourier // Simplify
(* True *)

I've used Integrate instead of InverseFourierTransform to calculate the inverse Fourier transform, because tsol triggers a bug of InverseFourierTransform, at least in v12.2.

As we can see, in this case the solution in unbounded domain happens to be the same as that determined by periodic b.c.. Not sure if there's a deeper reason for the coincidence, though.

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  • 1
    $\begingroup$ xzczd (@ does not work.) +1. Many thanks from me to you for your skillful work. $\endgroup$
    – user64494
    Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 14:11
  • $\begingroup$ It should be noticed if bc2 is replaced by bc3 = u[3, \[Theta]] == Sin[6 \[Theta]];, then DSolve produces the correct solution. $\endgroup$
    – user64494
    Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 14:30
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ @user64494 May be a coincidence. Though not explicitly documented, according to the examples in the document of DSolve, when b.c. in certain direction is missing, it seems that DSolve will simply assume the problem is defined in an unbounded domain i.e. in this case DSolve probably assumes $\theta \in (-\infty, +\infty)$. Perhaps for bc3, the solution in unbounded domain happens to be the same as that determined by periodic b.c.. $\endgroup$
    – xzczd
    Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 14:53
  • 2
    $\begingroup$ @xzczd It is nice solution (+1). It looks like we discussed this problem several times. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 15:10
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ @xzczd: You wrote "May be a coincidence". I don't thnik so: DSolve correctly solves many other Dirichlet problems on an annulus. $\endgroup$
    – user64494
    Commented Feb 2, 2021 at 16:39

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