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In the [[Mathematics|mathematical]] study of [[partial differential equation]]s, '''Lewy's example''' is a celebrated example, due to [[Hans Lewy]], of a linear partial differential equation with no solutions. It shows that the analog of the [[Cauchy–Kovalevskaya theorem]] does not hold in the smooth category. 
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The original example is not explicit, since it employs the [[Hahn–Banach theorem]], but there since have been various explicit examples of the same nature found by [[Harold Jacobowitz]].
 
The [[Malgrange–Ehrenpreis theorem]] states (roughly) that linear partial differential equations with [[constant coefficient]]s always have at least one solution; Lewy's example shows that this result cannot be extended to linear partial differential equations with polynomial coefficients.
 
==The Example==
 
The statement is as follows
:On ℝ×ℂ, there exists a [[Smooth function|smooth]] complex-valued function <math>F(t,z)</math> such that the differential equation
::<math>\frac{\partial u}{\partial\bar{z}}-iz\frac{\partial u}{\partial t} = F(t,z)</math>
:admits no solution on any open set. Note that if ''<math>F</math>'' is analytic then the [[Cauchy–Kovalevskaya theorem]] implies there exists a solution.
 
Lewy constructs this ''<math>F</math>'' using the following result:
:On ℝ×ℂ, suppose that <math>u(t,z)</math> is a function satisfying, in a neighborhood of the origin,
::<math>\frac{\partial u}{\partial\bar{z}}-iz\frac{\partial u}{\partial t} = \varphi^\prime(t) </math>
:for some ''C''<sup>1</sup> function ''&phi;''.  Then ''&phi;'' must be real-analytic in a (possibly smaller) neighborhood of the origin.
 
This may be construed as a non-existence theorem by taking ''&phi;'' to be merely a smooth function. Lewy's example takes this latter equation and in a sense ''translates'' its non-solvability to every point of ℝ×ℂ.  The method of proof uses a [[Baire category]] argument, so in a certain precise sense almost all equations of this form are unsolvable.
 
{{harvtxt|Mizohata|1962}} later found that the even simpler equation
:<math>\frac{\partial u}{\partial x}+ix\frac{\partial u}{\partial y} = F(x,y)</math>
depending on 2 real variables ''x'' and ''y'' sometimes has no solutions. This is almost the simplest possible partial differential operator with non-constant coefficients.
 
==Significance for CR manifolds==
A [[CR manifold]] comes equipped with a [[chain complex]] of differential operators, formally similar to the [[Dolbeault complex]] on a [[complex manifold]], called the <math>\scriptstyle\bar{\partial}_b</math>-complex.  The Dolbeault complex admits a version of the [[Poincaré lemma]].  In the language of [[sheaf (mathematics)|sheaves]], this means that the Dolbeault complex is exact.  The Lewy example, however, shows that the <math>\scriptstyle\bar{\partial}_b</math>-complex is almost never exact.
 
==References==
*{{citation
| last = Lewy
| first = Hans
| author-link = Hans Lewy
| title = An example of a smooth linear partial differential equation without solution
| journal = [[Annals of Mathematics]]
| volume = 66
| issue = 1
| year = 1957
| pages = 155–158
| jstor = 1970121
| mr = 0088629
| zbl = 0078.08104
| doi = 10.2307/1970121
}}.
*{{citation
| first = Sigeru
| last = Mizohata
| author-link = Sigeru Mizohata
| title = Solutions nulles et solutions non analytiques
| journal = Journal of Mathematics of Kyoto University
| volume = 1 
| issue = 2
| year = 1962
| language = [[French language|French]]
| url = http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.kjm/1250525061
| pages= 271–302
| mr = 142873
| zbl = 0106.29601
| doi =  
}}.
*{{springer|id=l/l120080|title=Lewy operator and Mizohata operator|first=Jean-Pierre |last=Rosay}}
 
[[Category:Partial differential equations]]

Latest revision as of 16:15, 17 December 2014

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