Next Article in Journal
New Fixed Point Theorems with Applications to Non-Linear Neutral Differential Equations
Previous Article in Journal
Weights-Based Image Demosaicking Using Posteriori Gradients and the Correlation of R–B Channels in High Frequency
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Lie Symmetry Analysis and Exact Solutions of Generalized Fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov Equations

1
Faculty of Civil Engineering and Mechanics, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650500, China
2
Center for Nonlinear Science Studies, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650500, China
3
Oxbridge College, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650106, China
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Symmetry 2019, 11(5), 601; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym11050601
Submission received: 19 March 2019 / Revised: 16 April 2019 / Accepted: 16 April 2019 / Published: 30 April 2019

Abstract

:
This paper considers the Lie symmetry analysis of a class of fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equations. We systematically show the procedure to obtain the Lie point symmetries for the equation. Accordingly, we study the vector fields of this equation. Meantime, the symmetry reductions of this equation are performed. Finally, by employing the obtained symmetry properties, we can get some new exact solutions to this fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation.

1. Introduction

As one of the important high dimensional nonlinear evolution equations, the Zakharov-Kuznetsov (ZK) equation was first used to discuss the evolution of the propagation of plane waves in magnetized plasma containing cold ions and isothermal electrons [1]. The dimensionless form in renormalized variables of the ZK equation is as follows:
u t + a u u x + b u x x x + c u x y y = 0 ,
where u = u ( t , x , y ) is the normalized electric potential. a , b , c are all normalized constants with respect to different physical meanings. For details of these coefficients, see [1,2]. Due to its wide application in maths and physics, the study of this equation was a wide range of theoretical and practical significance. There are various results about the ZK equation, for more details, one can see [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11].
In paper [12], Blaha et al. considered the following modified version of ZK equation.
u t + a u 2 u x + u x x x + u x y y = 0 ,
where the signs of a represents different physical phenomenon. In addition, Wazwaz [13] did a further study about a nonlinear dispersive modified ZK equation(mZK) as follows:
u t + a ( u n 2 ) x + b u x x x + k u x y y = 0 ,
where n 3 is odd and the sign is either positive or negative.
To include as many physical applications as possible, lots of papers discuss the generalized Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation of the following form [14,15].
u t + a ( u p ) x + b ( u q ) x x x + c ( u r ) x y y = 0 .
Please note that the paper [15] systematically illustrated the detailed group classification algorithm and the process of reduction by discussing Equation (4).
Recently, many important phenomena in various areas of science were well described by fractional order differential equations [16]. Due to the realistic senses, a lot of attention has been given to seek solutions of fractional differential equations (FDEs). Various methods such as the homotopy perturbation method (HPM) [17], the variational iteration method (VIM) [18] and the homotopy analysis method (HAM) [19] have been applied for fractional PDEs. Unfortunately, up to now, there are no general methods effective enough to solve the fractional order systems.
Using a new extended trial equation method, the authors of [20] considered the exact solutions of the generalized fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equations ( FZK ( p , q , r ) ) as follows:
D t α u + a ( u p ) x + b ( u q ) x x x + c ( u r ) x y y = 0 ,
where u = u ( t , x , y ) represents the electrostatic wave potential in plasmas, 0 < α 1 is the order of fractional derivative. a , b , c are arbitrary constants and the coefficient of a is the nonlinear term, the coefficients of b and c characterize the spatial dispersions in multi-dimensions. p , q , r 0 are integers. They successfully constructed some new exact solutions, i.e., the elliptic integral function F , Π solutions to (5). In particular, it is important to note that the symmetry analysis of (5) is not considered yet in [20].
As one of the most efficient and important methods of studying differential equations, the symmetry group theory has been extensively used to consider the symmetry properties of Zakharov- Kuznetsov equations, see [21,22,23,24,25,26,27] for example. Furthermore, the authors of [28] provided an interesting Appendix of how to proceed in the symmetry analysis of PDEs. Moreover, there have been excellent books about the symmetry analysis, one can be referred to [29,30,31].
However, not the same as it has been done in PDEs, the symmetry Lie group method is not so efficiently used in fractional differential equations (FDEs). To the best of our knowledge, there are lots of studies on the group properties of FDEs. In [32], the authors considered the Lie symmetries of a class of fractional order differential equations with an arbitrary number of independent variables. In [33], analysis of Lie symmetries with conservation laws of a (3+1)-dimensional fractional KdV-Zakharov- Kuznetsov (mKdV-ZK) equation has been considered. Some other results can be found in [34,35,36,37].
When it comes to fractional ZK equations, Lie symmetry analysis, conservation laws and exact solutions for a modified fractional (2+1)-mZK equation was considered in paper [38]. The equation reads as
D t α u + u 2 u x + u x x x + u x y y = 0 .
Please note that Equation (6) is the special case of (5).
In view of the above discussion, we meant to study the group invariant properties of the fractional ZK Equation (5) studied in [20]. For the convenience of discussion, system (5) can be rewritten as follows
D t α u + p a u p 1 u x + b q 3 3 q 2 + 2 q u q 3 u x 3 + 3 q 2 3 q u q 2 u x u x x + q u q 1 u x x x + c [ r 3 3 r 2 + 2 r u r 3 u x u y 2 + r 2 r u r 2 u x u y y + 2 r 2 2 r u r 2 u y u x y + r u r 1 u x y y ] = 0
The organization of the rest of this paper is as follows: In Section 2, some preliminary results needed in later sections and some notations, definitions are stated. In Section 3, we establish our main results about Lie symmetries for the fractional ZK Equation (5). In Section 4, examples of group transformations of solutions are considered and new exact solutions are constructed. In Section 5, we study symmetry reductions to the time fractional ZK equation. Finally, we present discussions and conclusions.

2. Preliminaries

From the viewpoint of Brown motion, the modified Riemann-Liouville(RL) derivative is defined as
D t μ f ( t ) = d n f d t n , μ = n , d n d t n I n μ f ( t ) , 0 n 1 < μ < n ,
where n N , I ν f ( t ) is the RL fractional integral of order ν , i.e.,
I ν f ( t ) = 1 Γ ( ν ) 0 t ( t s ) ν 1 f ( s ) d s , ν > 0 , f ( t ) , ν = 0 ,
where Γ ( ) is the Gamma function.
For the function u ( t , x ) , a Riemann-Liouville time fractional partial derivative of order μ can be defined as below [35]:
D t μ u ( t , x ) = n u t n , μ = n , 1 Γ ( n μ ) n t n 0 t ( t s ) n μ 1 u ( s , x ) d s , 0 n 1 < μ < n .
In this paper, we also need the following generalized definitions.
According to [32,39], the generalized E r d é l y i K o b e r fractional differential operator is defined as follows:
D { β 1 , β 2 , , β m } δ , α g : = j = 0 n 1 δ + j + k = 1 m 1 β k ξ k ξ k K { β 1 , β 2 , , β m } δ + α , n α g ( ξ 1 , ξ 2 , , ξ m ) ,
where
n = [ α ] + 1 , α N , α , α N ,
and the generalized E r d é l y i K o b e r fractional integral operator reads
K { β 1 , β 2 , , β m } δ , α g ( ξ 1 , ξ 2 , , ξ m ) = 1 Γ ( α ) 1 ( ν 1 ) α 1 ν ( δ + α ) g ( ξ 1 ν 1 β 1 , , ξ m ν 1 β m ) d ν , α > 0 , g ( ξ 1 , , ξ m ) , α = 0 .
In the following, we will give a short introduction about how to find Lie point symmetries of fractional order systems. For further information, one can refer to [30,31].
We now consider the following FDE
D t α u ( t , x , y ) = F ( t , x , y , u , u x , u y , u x x , u y y , u x y , u x x x , u x y y ) , 0 < α < 1 ,
with t , x , y independent variables, u dependent variables.
According to the Lie theory, for some group parameter ε , we need to determine a one parameter Lie group of infinitesimal transformations
t = t + ε τ ( t , x , y , u ) + O ( ε 2 ) , x = x + ε ξ ( t , x , y , u ) + O ( ε 2 ) , y = y + ε η ( t , x , y , u ) + O ( ε 2 ) , u = u + ε ϕ ( t , x , y , u ) + O ( ε 2 ) .
The associated infinitesimal generator is defined by
X = τ t + ξ x + η y + ϕ u ,
where
τ = d t d ε | ε = 0 , ξ = d x d ε | ε = 0 , η = d y d ε | ε = 0 , ϕ = d u d ε | ε = 0 .
According to the infinitesimal invariance criterion [31], Equation (13) admits transformation group (14) if and only if the following equation holds
pr ( α , 3 ) X ( Δ ) | Δ = 0 = 0 , Δ = D t α u F .
By keeping the essential terms, the operator pr ( α , 3 ) X takes the following form
pr ( α , 3 ) X = X + ϕ α , t D t α u + ϕ x u x + ϕ y u y + ϕ x x u x x + ϕ x y u x y + ϕ y y u y y + ϕ x x x u x x x + ϕ y y y u y y y + ϕ x y y u x y y ,
where
ϕ α , t = D t α ( ϕ ) + ξ D t α ( u x ) + η D t α ( u y ) D t α ( ξ u x ) D t α ( η u y ) + D t α ( u D t ( τ ) ) D t α + 1 ( τ u ) + τ D t α + 1 ( u ) , ϕ x = D x ( ϕ ) u t D x ( τ ) u x D x ( ξ ) u y D x ( η ) , ϕ y = D y ( ϕ ) u t D y ( τ ) u x D y ( ξ ) u y D y ( η ) , ϕ x x = D x ( ϕ x ) u x t D x ( τ ) u x x D x ( ξ ) u x y D x ( η ) , ϕ y y = D y ( ϕ y ) u y t D y ( τ ) u x y D y ( ξ ) u y y D y ( η ) , ϕ x y = D y ( ϕ x ) u x t D y ( τ ) u x x D y ( ξ ) u x y D y ( η ) , ϕ x x x = D x ( ϕ x x ) u x x t D x ( τ ) u x x x D x ( ξ ) u x x y D x ( η ) , ϕ x y y = D x ( ϕ y y ) u y y t D x ( τ ) u y x y D x ( ξ ) u y y y D x ( η ) , ϕ y y y = D y ( ϕ y y ) u y y t D y ( τ ) u y x y D y ( ξ ) u y y y D y ( η )
Here, the total derivative operator D i is defined by
D i = x i + u i p u p + u i j p u j p + , i , j = 1 , 2 , 3 , p = 1 ,
and ( x 1 , x 2 , x 3 ) = ( t , x , y ) , ( u 1 ) = ( u ) . We see that the explicit expression for the above ones can be obtained in a standard procedure [31]. In addition, according to [40], after similar calculation as [35], we can have the explicit expression for ϕ α , t :
ϕ α , t = n = 1 α n t n ϕ u α n + 1 D t n + 1 ( τ ) t α n u n = 1 α n D t n ( ξ ) t α n ( u x ) n = 1 α n D t n ( η ) t α n ( u y ) + t α ϕ + ( ϕ u α D t ( τ ) ) t α u u t α ϕ u + μ t α
where
μ t α = n = 2 m = 2 n k = 2 m r = 0 k 1 α n n m k r t n α ( u ) r k ! Γ ( n + 1 α ) d m d t m ( u k r ) n m + k ϕ t n m u k .
Because we will use F r a c S y m [40] in our paper, as request, hereafter, we only consider symmetries where ϕ is linear in u (assume μ t α = 0 ), i.e.,
ϕ ( t , x , y , u ) = u G ( t , x , y ) + H ( t , x , y ) .
According to (15), by applying the operators pr ( α , 3 ) X to Equation (13), after splitting the obtained relations by independent variables, we obtain a system of linear PDEs and FDEs by equating these coefficients to zero. Finally, by solving this over-determined system, we can obtain the vector fields X admitted by FDE (13).

3. Lie Symmetries for the Generalized Fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov Equation

Applying the third prolongation pr ( α , 3 ) X to (7), we obtain
ϕ α , t + a p ( p 1 ) ϕ u p 2 u x + a p u p 1 ϕ x + b [ ( q 3 3 q 2 + 2 q ) [ ( q 3 ) ϕ u q 4 u x 3 + u q 3 ( ϕ x ) 3 ] + ( 3 q 2 3 q ) [ ( q 2 ) ϕ u q 3 u x u x x + u q 2 ϕ x u x x + u q 2 u x ϕ x x ] + q [ ( q 1 ) ϕ u q 2 u x x x + u q 1 ϕ x x x ] ] + c [ ( r 3 3 r 2 + 2 r ) [ ( r 3 ) ϕ u r 4 u x u y 2 + u r 3 ϕ x u y 2 + u r 3 u x ( ϕ y ) 2 ] + ( r 2 r ) [ ( r 2 ) ϕ u r 3 u x u y y + u r 2 ϕ x u y y + u r 2 u x ϕ y y ] + ( 2 r 2 2 r ) [ ( r 2 ) ϕ u r 3 u y u x y + u r 2 ϕ y u x y + u r 2 u y ϕ x y ] + r [ ( r 1 ) ϕ u r 2 u x y y + u r 1 ϕ x y y ] ] = 0 .
Substituting (17) into (22), by the Maple package [40,41], we can obtain the determining equations for the symmetry group. For simplicity, we omit the long expressions of the determining equations. In addition, by the DESOLVII PDE solver p d e s o l v [42], we obtain the general solution of determining equations with respect to τ , ξ , η , ϕ :
τ ( t , x , y , u ) = ( 3 p q 2 ) c 4 t + c 3 η ( t , x , y , u ) = ( p r ) α c 4 y + c 2 ξ ( t , x , y , u ) = ( p q ) α c 4 x + c 1 ϕ ( t , x , y , u ) = 2 α c 4 u
where c i ( i = 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ) are arbitrary constants.
Furthermore, due to transformation (14), to preserve the invariance of the RL fractional derivative operator, we need
τ ( 0 , x , y , u ) = 0 c 3 = 0 .
In fact, transformation (14) is required to leave the lower limit of the integral in the expression of (8), and therefore the equation t = 0 should keep the invariant form under this transformation.
Hence, the final symmetry for the time fractional ZK equation is:
τ ( t , x , y , u ) = ( 3 p q 2 ) c 4 t η ( t , x , y , u ) = ( p r ) α c 4 y + c 2 ξ ( t , x , y , u ) = ( p q ) α c 4 x + c 1 ϕ ( t , x , y , u ) = 2 α c 4 u
Finally, the symmetry group of the time fractional ZK equation is given by the follwing vector fields
X 1 = x , X 2 = y , X 3 = ( 3 p q 2 ) t t 2 u α u + ( p q ) α x x + ( p r ) α y y .
From (26), we can find the symmetry generators. They form a closed Lie algebra as shown in Table 1.
Here, the entry in row i and column j means [ X i , X j ] . It is the commutator for the Lie algebra defined by
[ X i , X j ] = X i X j X j X i .

4. Examples of Group Transformations of Solutions

In this part, by solving the following initial problems, we can get the Lie symmetry group from the related symmetries to get some new exact solutions from the known ones.
d t d ε = τ , t | ε = 0 = t , d x d ε = ξ , x | ε = 0 = x , d y d ε = η , y | ε = 0 = y , d u d ε = ϕ , u | ε = 0 = u .
Therefore, for the infinitesimal generator X 1 = x , the corresponding Lie symmetry group are translation along the x-axis
g 1 : ( t , x , y , u ) ( t , x + ε 1 , y , u ) ,
where ε 1 is an arbitrary real number. The group g 1 shows the space-invariance of the equation along the x-axis. Hence, if u = f ( t , x , y ) is a solution of (5), by group g 1 , we can obtain the corresponding new solutions of (5), i.e.,
u 1 = f ( t , x ε 1 , y ) .
For X 2 = y , the corresponding Lie symmetry group are translation along the y-axis
g 2 : ( t , x , y , u ) ( t , x , y + ε 2 , u ) ,
where ε 2 is an arbitrary real number. The group g 2 shows the space-invariance of the equation along the y-axis. Hence, if u = f ( t , x , y ) is a solution of (5), by group g 2 , we can obtain the corresponding new solutions of (5), i.e.,
u 2 = f ( t , x , y ε 2 ) .
In addition, X 3 = ( 3 p q 2 ) t t 2 u α u + ( p q ) α x x + ( p r ) α y y corresponds to the nonhomogeneous scaling group
g 3 : ( t , x , y , u ) ( t e ( 3 p q 2 ) ε 3 , x e α ( p q ) ε 3 , y e α ( p r ) ε 3 , u e 2 α ε 3 ) ,
where ε 3 is an arbitrary real number. The group g 3 is the well-known scaling transformations. Hence, if u = f ( t , x , y ) is any solution of (5), by group g 3 , we can obtain the corresponding new solutions of (5), that is,
u 3 = e 2 α ε 3 f ( t e ( 3 p q 2 ) ε 3 , x e α ( p q ) ε 3 , y e α ( p r ) ε 3 ) .
Moreover, the above scaling transformations either expand or contract the size of not only the independent variables but also the dependent ones. In addition, scaling transformation can provide a way to associate the behavior of the solution from different perspectives, for example, a short time solution with large initial values can be rescaled to a longer time solution with small initial values.
To illustrate this, we consider the following example discussed in [20]:
Consider p = q = r = n in the Equation (5), i.e.,
D t α u + a ( u n ) x + b ( u n ) x x x + c ( u n ) x y y = 0 , 0 < α 1 .
The author of [20] obtained two exact solutions of (34):
u 1 ( t , x , y ) = exp [ 1 A ( x + y λ t α Γ ( 1 + α ) η 0 ) ] + α 1 1 n 1 , u 2 ( t , x , y ) = exp [ 1 A ( x + y λ t α Γ ( 1 + α ) η 0 ) ] + ( α 1 α 2 ) 2 exp [ 1 A ( x + y λ t α Γ ( 1 + α ) η 0 ) ] + 2 ( α 1 + α 2 ) 4 1 n 1 .
Then, one can obtain the following two new exact solutions of (34) by applying the group (32).
u 13 ( t , x , y ) = e 2 α ε 3 [ exp ( Θ ) + α 1 ] 1 n 1 , u 23 ( t , x , y ) = e 2 α ε 3 exp ( Θ ) + ( α 1 α 2 ) 2 exp ( Θ ) + 2 ( α 1 + α 2 ) 4 1 n 1 ,
where Θ = 1 A ( x e α ( p q ) ε 3 + y e α ( p r ) ε 3 λ ( t e ( 3 p q 2 ) ε 3 ) α Γ ( 1 + α ) η 0 ) . Compared with the existed solutions, we see that these new solutions are the size dilations of not only the independent variables but also the dependent ones.
For the other two symmetry groups, new invariant solutions can be found through existed solutions for the time fractional ZK equation. Maybe more interesting solutions from the physics point of view can be found by applying the full group to the equation. Thus we enrich the former results in [20].

5. Symmetry Reductions and Exact Solutions to the Time Fractional ZK Equation

In this section, we mainly consider the symmetry reductions to the time fractional ZK Equation.
(i)
For the generator X 1 = x , we have the invariant
u = g ( τ , η ) ,
where τ = t , η = y are the group-invariant. Substituting it into (5) yields the following reduced fractional ODE
D τ α g ( τ , η ) = 0 .
To solve (38), we need the Laplace transform
L { f ( t ) } = 0 e s t f ( t ) d t F ( s ) .
After taking the inverse transform to F ( s ) , we have the solution, which is
g ( τ , η ) = f 4 ( η ) C 0 Γ ( α ) τ α 1 ,
where f 4 ( η ) is an arbitrary function about η , C 0 is a constant.
Hence, for Equation (5), we give the following group-invariant solution:
u = f 4 ( y ) C 0 Γ ( α ) t α 1 .
Please note that this solution can be viewed as a kind of standing wave solution and it is independent of the space variable x. In addition, due to 0 < α < 1 , it decays in time. This solution has not appeared in previous papers.
(ii)
For the generator X 2 = y , we have the invariant
u = g ( τ , ξ ) ,
where τ = t , ξ = x are the group-invariant. Substituting it into (5), we obtain the following reduced fractional differential equation
D τ α g + a p g p 1 g ξ + b ( q 3 3 q 2 + 2 q ) g q 3 g ξ 3 + ( 3 q 2 3 q ) g q 2 g ξ g ξ ξ + q g q 1 g ξ ξ ξ = 0 .
(iii)
For the generator X 3 = ( 3 p q 2 ) t t 2 u α u + ( p q ) α x x + ( p r ) α y y , by integrating the invariant condition
d t ( 3 p q 2 ) t = d x ( p q ) α x = d y ( p r ) α y = d u 2 u α ,
we obtain the invariant
u = g ( ξ , η ) t 2 α 3 p q 2 ,
where ξ = x t ( p q ) α 3 p q 2 , η = y t ( p r ) α 3 p q 2 are the group-invariant.
Hereafter, for simplicity, we note a 0 = ( p q ) α 3 p q 2 , b 0 = ( p r ) α 3 p q 2 , c 0 = 2 α 3 p q 2 .
Substituting (44) into (5), for 0 < α < 1 , according to the definition of RL fractional derivative, we obtain
α u t α = 1 Γ ( 1 α ) t [ 0 t ( t s ) α s c 0 g ( x s a 0 , y s b 0 ) d s ] .
Let τ = t s , then d s = t τ 2 d τ , then (45) can be rewritten as
α u t α = 1 Γ ( 1 α ) t [ t 1 + c 0 α 1 ( τ 1 ) α τ ( ( 1 + c 0 ) + ( 1 α ) ) g ( ξ τ a 0 , η τ b 0 ) d τ ] .
By the generalized E r d é l y i K o b e r fractional integration operator, from (46) we have
α u t α = t t 1 + c 0 α K { 1 a 0 , 1 b 0 } 1 + c 0 , 1 α g ( ξ , η ) = t c 0 α 1 + c 0 α + a 0 ξ ξ + b 0 η η K { 1 a 0 , 1 b 0 } 1 + c 0 , 1 α g ( ξ , η ) .
In addition, by the generalized E r d é l y i K o b e r fractional differential operator, (47) becomes
α u t α = t c 0 α D { 1 a 0 , 1 b 0 } 1 + c 0 α , α g ( ξ , η ) .
Then, by (48), Equation (5) is reduced into the following nonlinear fractional partial differential equation
D { 1 a 0 , 1 b 0 } 1 + c 0 α , α g ( ξ , η ) + a p t c 0 ( p 1 ) + a 0 + α g p 1 g ξ + b q t c 0 ( q 1 ) + 3 a 0 + α [ ( q 1 ) g q 3 ( q 2 ) g ξ + 3 g g ξ g ξ ξ + g q 1 g ξ ξ ξ ] + c r t c 0 ( r 1 ) + a 0 + 2 b 0 + α [ ( r 1 ) g r 3 g g ξ g η η + 2 g g η g ξ η + ( r 2 ) g ξ g η 2 + g r 1 g ξ η η ] = 0 .
For X 1 , we have discussed the reduced equation (38) and obtained its solution (41). For X 3 , we also have obtained the reduced equation (49). However, this equation is a nonlinear fractional partial differential equation with generalized Erdelyi-Kober fractional differential operator and it is difficult to discuss this FPDE.
In the following, we will do further study on symmetry reductions and exact solutions of (43) in detail.
If Equation (43) is invariant under the point transformations
τ * = τ + ϵ τ ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) + O ( ϵ 2 ) , ξ * = ξ + ϵ ξ ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) + O ( ϵ 2 ) , g * = g + ϵ g ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) + O ( ϵ 2 ) ,
with the group parameter ϵ , the associated Lie algebra is spanned by
V = τ ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) τ + ξ ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) ξ + g ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) g ,
in which τ ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) , ξ ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) , g ¯ ( ξ , τ , g ) are to be determined.
If the vector fields above generates a symmetry of (43), we obtain the following Lie symmetry condition
pr ( α , 3 ) V ( Δ 1 ) | Δ 1 = 0 = 0 ,
where
Δ 1 = D τ α g + a p g p 1 g ξ + b ( q 3 3 q 2 + 2 q ) g q 3 g ξ 3 + ( 3 q 2 3 q ) g q 2 g ξ g ξ ξ + q g q 1 g ξ ξ ξ .
As with the similar discussion given in previous sections, again by using the Maple package [31,40,41], we can have the symmetry algebra of (43), which is spanned by the following vector fields
V 1 = ξ , V 2 = ( 3 p q 2 ) τ τ 2 g α g + ( p q ) α ξ ξ .
For V 1 , we obtain the group invariant
g = f 5 ( τ ) .
Inserting it into (43), we have the following reduced fractional ODE
D τ α f 5 ( τ ) = 0 ,
which indicates that f 5 ( τ ) = C 1 τ α 1 , where C 1 is a constant. As a result, we obtain a group-invariant solution of (5) of the form
u = C 1 t α 1 .
This solution is only related to the time variable. In addition, it also decays in time.
For V 2 , we have the group invariant
g = h ( ξ ˜ ) τ c 0
where ξ ˜ = ξ τ a 0 , τ = t , ξ = x .
As the similar discussion in ( i i i ) , we can see that (43) can be reduced into the following fractional differential equation
D { 1 a 0 } 1 + c 0 α , α h ( ξ ˜ ) + a p t c 0 ( p 1 ) + a 0 + α h p 1 h ξ ˜ + b q t c 0 ( q 1 ) + 3 a 0 + α ( q 1 ) h q 3 ( ( q 2 ) h ξ ˜ + 3 h h ξ ˜ h ξ ˜ ξ ˜ ) + h q 1 h ξ ˜ ξ ˜ ξ ˜ = 0 ,
where D is the E r d é l y i K o b e r fractional differential operator.

6. Conclusions

In this paper, by using the Lie symmetry analysis method, we have considered the invariance properties of a class of generalized fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equations. Lie point symmetries to this equation is performed. The Lie algebra and the symmetry reductions of this fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation are obtained. Finally, some new exact solutions were constructed to the fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation. Although there have been lots of symmetry results for the time fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equations, all those models considered can be viewed as the special cases of the one we considered in this paper. Hence, we have extended some existing results. However, as we see, the coefficients a , b and c are all normalized constants according to different physical meanings. To stay closely to the former research and to keep its specific physical meaning of parameters, therefore, we only consider the fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation with constant coefficients. Furthermore, note that in [24], a class of generalized Zakharov-Kuznetsov equations with variable coefficients was considered. Perhaps we will pay our attention to this more generalized model for future studies.

Author Contributions

The authors contributed equally and significantly in writing this article. Both authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the Scientific Research Fund of Yunnan Provincial Education Department (Grant Nos. 2018JS752) and National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 11801240,10971185).

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to anonymous referees for their constructive comments and suggestions which have greatly improved this paper.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Zakharov, V.; Kuznetsov, E.A. Three-dimensional solitons. Sov. Phys. JETP 1974, 29, 594–597. [Google Scholar]
  2. Elwakil, S.A.; El-Shewy, E.K.; Abdelwahed, H.G. Solution of the perturbed Zakharov-Kuznetsov (ZK) equation describing electron-acoustic solitary waves in a magnetized plasma. Chin. J. Phys. 2011, 49, 732–744. [Google Scholar]
  3. Elboree, M.K. Variational approach, soliton solutions and singular solitons for new coupled ZK system. Comput. Math. Appl. 2015, 70, 934–941. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Faminskii, A.V. An initial-boundary value problem in a strip for two-dimensional Zakharov-Kuznetsov- Burgers equation. Nonlinear Anal-Theor. 2015, 116, 132–144. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Khan, K.; Akbar, M.A. Exact and solitary wave solutions for the Tzitzeica-Dodd-Bullough and the modified KdV-Zakharov-Kuznetsov equations using the modified simple equation method. Ain Shams Eng. J. 2013, 4, 903–909. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Li, H.; Sun, J.; Qin, M. Multi-Symplectic Method for the Zakharov-Kuznetsov Equation. Adv. Appl. Math. Mech. 2015, 7, 58–73. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Mandal, P.K.; Ghosh, U.N.; Chaterjee, P. Zakharov-Kuznestov-Burger Equation for Ion-Acoustic Waves in Cylindrical Geometry. Earth Moon Planets 2015, 115, 45–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Molinet, L.; Pilod, D. Bilinear Strichartz estimates for the Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation and applications. Annales de l’Institut Henri Poincaré (C) Non Linear Anal. 2015, 32, 347–371. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Sabetkar, A.; Dorranian, D. Role of superthermality on dust acoustic structures in the frame of a modified Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation in magnetized dusty plasma. Phys. Scr. 2015, 90, 035603. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Yin, J.Y. New infinite sequence complexion soliton-like solutions of (2+1)-dimensional Zakharov-Kuznetsov modified equal width equation. Acta Phys. Sin.-Chin. Ed. 2014, 63, 230202. [Google Scholar]
  11. Yu, J.; Wang, D.-S.; Sun, Y.; Wu, S. Modified method of simplest equation for obtaining exact solutions of the Zakharov–Kuznetsov equation, the modified Zakharov–Kuznetsov equation, and their generalized forms. Nonlinear Dyn. 2016, 85, 2449–2465. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Blaha, R.; Laedke, E.W.; Spatschek, K.H. Collapsing states of generalized Korteweg-de Vries equations. Physica D 1989, 40, 249–264. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Wazwaz, A.-M. Special types of the nonlinear dispersive Zakharov–Kuznetsov equation with compactons, solitons, and periodic solutions. Int. J. Comput. Math. 2004, 81, 1107–1119. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Biazar, J.; Badpeima, F.; Azimi, F. Application of the homotopy perturbation method to Zakharov–Kuznetsov equations. Comput. Math. Appl. 2009, 58, 2391–2394. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  15. Huang, D.-J.; Ivanova, N. Algorithmic framework for group analysis of differential equations and its application to generalized Zakharov-Kuznetsov equations. J. Differ. Equ. 2016, 260, 2354–2382. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Kumar, D.; Singh, J.; Kumar, S. Numerical computation of nonlinear fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation arising in ion-acoustic waves. J. Egypt. Math. Soc. 2014, 22, 373–378. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Momani, S.; Odibat, Z. Modifed homotopy perturbation method: Application to quadratic Riccati differential equation of fractional order. Chaos Soliton Fract. 2008, 36, 167–174. [Google Scholar]
  18. Turut, V.; Güzel, N. On solving Partial Differential Equations of Fractional Order by Using the Variational Iteration Method and Multivariate Padé. Eur. J. Pure Appl. Math. 2013, 6, 147–171. [Google Scholar]
  19. Kumar, S.; Kumar, D. Fractional modelling for BBM-Burger equation by using new homotopy analysis transform method. J. Assoc. Arab Univ. Basic Appl. Sci. 2014, 16, 16–20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  20. Pandir, Y.; Gurefe, Y. New exact solutions of the generalized fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov equations. Life Sci. J. 2013, 10, 2701–2705. [Google Scholar]
  21. Liu, H.; Yan, F.; Xu, C. Lie symmetry analysis and some exact solutions for the Zakharov-Kuznetsov (ZK) equation and modified ZK equation. Far East J. Appl. Math. 2010, 42, 81–112. [Google Scholar]
  22. Adem, K.R.; Khalique, C.M. Exact solutions and conservation laws of Zakharov–Kuznetsov modified equal width equation with power law nonlinearity. Nonlinear Anal.-Real World Appl. 2012, 13, 1692–1702. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Ali, M.N.; Seadawy, A.R.; Husnine, S.M. Lie point symmetries, conservation laws and exact solutions of (1+n)-dimensional modified Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation describing the waves in plasma physics. Pramana 2018, 91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Yan, Z.; Liu, X. Symmetry and similarity solutions of variable coefficients generalized Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation. Appl. Math. Comput. 2006, 180, 288–294. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Sahoo, S.; Garai, G.; Ray, S.S. Lie symmetry analysis for similarity reduction and exact solutions of modified KdV-Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation. Nonlinear Dynam. 2017, 87, 1995–2000. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Adem, A.R.; Muatjetjeja, B. Conservation laws and exact solutions for a 2D Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation. Appl. Math. Lett. 2015, 48, 109–117. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Nadjafikhah, M.; Ahangari, F. Symmetry analysis and similarity reduction of the Korteweg-de Vries- Zakharov-Kuznetsov equation. Asian Eur. J. Math. 2012, 5, 1250006. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Recio, E.; Anco, S.C. Conservation laws and symmetries of radial generalized nonlinear p-Laplacian evolution equations. J. Math. Anal. Appl. 2017, 452, 1229–1261. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Olver, P. Applications of Lie Groups to Differential Equations; Springer: New York, NY, USA, 1986. [Google Scholar]
  30. Ibragimov, N. Elementary Lie Group Analysis and Ordinary Differential Equations; John Wiley and Sons: Chichester, UK, 1999. [Google Scholar]
  31. Ibragimov, N.K.; Ibragimov, R.N. Applications of Lie Group Analysis in Geophysical Fluid Dynamics; Higher Education Press: Beijing, China, 2011. [Google Scholar]
  32. Leo, R.A.; Sicuro, G.; Tempesta, P. A general theory of Lie symmetries for fractional differential equations. arXiv 2014, arXiv:1405.1017v2. [Google Scholar]
  33. Sahoo, S.; Ray, S.S. Analysis of Lie symmetries with conservation laws for the (3+1)-dimensional time-fractional mKdV–ZK equation in ion-acoustic waves. Nonlinear Dyn. 2017, 90, 1105–1113. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Chen, C.; Jiang, Y.L. Lie group analysis method for two classes of fractional partial differential equations. Commun. Nonlinear SCI 2015, 26, 24–35. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Huang, Q.; Zhdanov, R. Symmetries and exact solutions of the time fractional Harry-Dym equation with Riemann-Liouville derivative. Physica A 2014, 409, 110–118. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Wang, G.; Liu, X.; Zhang, Y. Lie symmetry analysis to the time fractional generalized fifth-order KdV equation. Commun. Nonlinear SCI 2013, 18, 2321–2326. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Hashemi, M.S.; Baleanu, D. On the time fractional generalized fisher equation: Group similarities and analytical solutions. Commun. Theor. Phys. 2016, 65, 11–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Baleanua, D.; Inc, M.; Yusuf, A.; Aliyu, A.I. Lie symmetry analysis, exact solutions and conservation laws for the time fractional modified Zakharov–Kuznetsov equation. Nonlinear Anal.-Model. Control 2017, 22, 861–876. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Kiryakova, V. Generalized Fractional Calculus and Applications; Longman Scientific and Technical: Harlow, UK; John Wiley and Sons, Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1994. [Google Scholar]
  40. Jefferson, G.F.; Carminati, J. FracSym: Automated symbolic computation of Lie symmetries of fractional differential equations. Comput. Phys. Commun. 2014, 185, 430–441. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Jefferson, G.F.; Carminati, J. ASP: Automated symbolic computation of approximate symmetries of differential equations. Comput. Phys. Commun. 2013, 184, 1045–1063. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Vu, K.T.; Jefferson, G.F.; Carminati, J. Finding generalised symmetries of differential equations using the MAPLE package DESOLVII. Comput. Phys. Commun. 2012, 183, 1044–1054. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Table 1. Commutator table of Lie algebra (26).
Table 1. Commutator table of Lie algebra (26).
[Xi, Xj]X1X2X3
X100 ( p q ) α X 1
X200 ( p r ) α X 2
X3 ( p q ) α X 1 ( p r ) α X 2 0

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Li, C.; Zhang, J. Lie Symmetry Analysis and Exact Solutions of Generalized Fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov Equations. Symmetry 2019, 11, 601. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym11050601

AMA Style

Li C, Zhang J. Lie Symmetry Analysis and Exact Solutions of Generalized Fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov Equations. Symmetry. 2019; 11(5):601. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym11050601

Chicago/Turabian Style

Li, Changzhao, and Juan Zhang. 2019. "Lie Symmetry Analysis and Exact Solutions of Generalized Fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov Equations" Symmetry 11, no. 5: 601. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym11050601

APA Style

Li, C., & Zhang, J. (2019). Lie Symmetry Analysis and Exact Solutions of Generalized Fractional Zakharov-Kuznetsov Equations. Symmetry, 11(5), 601. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym11050601

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop