1. Introduction
In recent years, fractional order calculus has been one of the most rapidly developing areas of mathematical analysis. In fact, a natural phenomenon may depend not only on the time instant but also on the previous time history, which can be successfully modeled by fractional calculus. Fractional-order differential equations are naturally related to systems with memory, as fractional derivatives are usually nonlocal operators. Thus fractional differential equations (FDEs) play an important role because of their application in various fields of science, such as mathematics, physics, chemistry, optimal control theory, finance, biology, engineering and so on [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7].
It is of importance to find efficient methods for solving FDEs. More recently, much attention has been paid to the solutions of FDEs using various methods, such as the Adomian decomposition method (2005) [
8], the first integral method (2014) [
9], the Lie group theory method (2012, 2015) [
10,
11], the homotopy analysis method (2016) [
12], the inverse differential operational method (2016) [
13,
14,
15], the F-expansion method (2017) [
16], M-Wright transforms (2017) [
17], exponential differential operators (2017, 2018) [
18,
19], and so on. In reality, the finding of exact solutions of the FDEs is hard work and remains a problem.
Recently, investigations have shown that a new method based on the invariant subspace provides an effective tool to find the exact solution of FDEs. This method was initially proposed by Galaktionov and Svirshchevskii (1995, 1996, 2007) [
20,
21,
22]. The invariant subspace method was developed by Later Gazizov and Kasatkin (2013) [
23], Harris and Garra (2013, 2014) [
24,
25], Sahadevan and Bakkyaraj (2015) [
26], and Ouhadan and El Kinani (2015) [
27].
In 2016, R. Sahadevan and P. Prakash [
28] showed how the invariant subspace method could be extended to time fractional partial differential equations (FPDEs) and could construct their exact solutions.
where
is a fractional time derivative in the Caputo sense, and
is a nonlinear differential operator of order
k.
In 2016, S. Choudhary and V. Daftardar-Gejji [
29] developed the invariant subspace method for deriving exact solutions of partial differential equations with fractional space and time derivatives.
where
is the linear/nonlinear differential operator;
and
are Caputo time derivatives and Caputo space derivatives, respectively;
and
.
In 2017, K.V. Zhukovsky [
30] used the inverse differential operational method to obtain solutions for differential equations with mixed derivatives of physical problems.
Motivated by the above results, in this paper, we develop the invariant subspace method for finding exact solutions to some nonlinear partial differential equations with fractional-order mixed partial derivatives (including both fractional space derivatives and time derivatives).
where
,
is a linear/nonlinear differential operator;
and
are Caputo time derivatives and Caputo space derivatives, respectively;
is the Caputo mixed partial derivative of space and time;
,
and
.
Using the invariant subspace method, the FPDEs are reduced to the systems of FDEs that can be solved by familiar analytical methods.
The rest of this paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, the preliminaries and notations are given. In
Section 3, we develop the invariant subspace method for solving fractional space and time derivative nonlinear partial differential equations with fractional-order mixed derivatives. In
Section 4, illustrative examples are given to explain the applicability of the method. Initial value problems are considered. Finally in
Section 5, we give conclusions.
4. Illustrative Examples
In this section, we give several examples to illustrate Theorems 1 and 2.
Example 1. The fractional diffusion equation is as follows:where constant. Diffusion is a process in which molecules move around until they are evenly spread out in the area. For , the phenomenon is referred to as super-diffusion, and for , it is called normal diffusion, whereas describes subdiffusion.
We consider two cases of Equation (
19): case 1:
; case 2:
.
Case 1: .
The subspace
is invariant under
and
as
It follows from Theorem 1 applied to Equation (
19) that Equation (
19) has the exact solution that follows:
where
and
satisfy the system of FDEs as follows:
Solving the above FDE (22), we obtain
Substituting Equation (
23) into Equation (
21), we obtain
Then
Substituting Equations (23) and (25) into Equation (
19), we obtain Equation (
19) with the solution as follows:
where
a and
b are arbitrary constants.
It is clearly verified that the subspace
is invariant under
and
as
We let Equation (
19) have the exact solution that follows:
where
and
satisfy the system of FDEs as follows:
Equation (
30) implies that
. Thus Equation (
29) takes the form
which has the following solution:
Similarly, Equation (
28) yields
Thus, Equation (
19) has the following solution:
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
It can be easily verified that
is also an invariant subspace with respect to
and
, as
We consider the exact solution of the form
where
and
satisfy the following system of FDEs:
Clearly,
. Solving Equation (
33) with the Laplace transform method, we obtain the following:
Thus Equation (
19) has the exact solution that follows:
where
a and
b are arbitrary constants.
We find that Equations (26), (31) and (34) are distinct particular solutions of Equation (
19) under distinct invariant subspaces. Subspace
is invariant under
and
, as
Thus we obtain infinitely many invariant subspaces for Equation (
19), which in turn yield infinitely many particular solutions.
Case 2: .
Clearly, subspace
is an invariant subspace under
and
, as
We look for the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are unknown functions to be determined;
and
satisfy the system of FDEs as follows:
Solving Equations (35)–(37), we obtain
Then, we obatin the exact solution of Equation (
19) as
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
When
and
are other numbers, we can similarly obtain the exact solution of Equation (
19).
Next, we find the closed-form solutions of FPDEs satisfying initial conditions using the invariant subspace method.
Example 2. We have the following FPDE with the initial condition as follows: The subspace
is invariant under
and
, as
We consider the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are unknown functions to be determined.
By substituting Equation (
40) into Equation (
38) and equating coefficients of different powers of
x, we obtain the following system of FDEs:
We obtain
, and Equation (
42) takes the following form:
Then using the Laplace transform technique, we obtain
Using the inverse Laplace transform, we obtain
which leads to the exact solution of Equation (
38) that follows:
where
a and
b are arbitrary constants.
Thus the exact solution of Equation (
38) along with the initial condition of Equation (
39) is
Example 3. The fractional wave equation is used as an example to model the propagation of diffusive waves in viscoelastic solids. We considered the fractional wave equation with a constant absorption term as follows: Clearly, the subspace
is invariant under
and
, as
By an application of Theorem 2, we know that Equation (
43) has the exact solution as follows:
where
and
satisfy the system of FDEs as follows:
Solving Equations (45) and (46) we obtain the following:
Case 1: when
:
Thus Equation (
43) has the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
By the initial conditions of Equation (
44), we obtain
and
.
Hence the exact solution of Equations (40) and (41) is
Case 2: when
:
Thus Equation (
43) has the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
Substituting the initial conditions of Equation (
44), we obtain
and
.
Thus the exact solution of Equations (43) and (44) is
We consider the following fractional generalization of the wave equation with a constant absorption term:
We know that the subspace
is invariant from the above. In view of Theorem 1, Equation (
47) has the exact solution that follows:
where
and
satisfy the system of FDEs as follows:
Solving the system of FDEs (48) and (49), we obtain
Therefore Equation (
47) has the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
Example 4. The Korteweg–de Vries (KdV) equation describes the evolution in time of long, unidirectional, nonlinear shallow water waves. We considered the fractional KdV equation that follows: is an invariant subspace under
and
, as
We consider an exact solution that follows:
where
and
are unknown functions to be determined. It follows from Theorem 1 applied to Equation (
47) that
and
satisfy the FDEs as follows:
Solving Equation (
53), we obtain
.
Hence Equation (
52) has the form
We obtain
Thus the exact solution of Equation (
50) is
where
and
c are arbitrary constants.
Example 5. The fractional version of the nonlinear heat equation is as follows: Clearly, the subspace
is invariant under
and
, as
It follows from Theorem 1 that we consider the exact solution of Equation (
54) as follows:
such that
Solving Equations (55) and (56), we obtain
We obtain an exact solution as follows:
where
a and
b are arbitrary constants.
Next, we consider the integer-order differential equations in [
30]. We can obtain some new different solutions using the invariant subspace method.
Example 6. The modified hyperbolic heat conduction equation with the mixed derivative term is as follows ([30]):where const. Clearly, the subspace
is an invariant subspace under
and
, as
We let the exact solution be as follows:
where
are unknown functions to be determined, and
and
satisfy the system of differential equations as follows:
Solving Equation (
60), we obtain
Hence Equation (
59) has the form
We obtain
Then, we obtain the exact solution of Equation (
57) as
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
Substituting the conditions of Equation (
58) into Equation (
61), we obtain
and
When
has linear dependence on
x, Equations (57) and (58) have the partial solution
where
When
is not linearly dependent on
x, Equations (57) and (58) do not have the form of the solution given by Equation (
61).
The subspace
is invariant under
and
, as
Thus we obtain infinitely many invariant subspaces for Equation (
57), which in turn yield infinitely many solutions. If
is a polynomial, we can obtain an exact solution of Equations (57) and (58).
Example 7. The Fokker–Planck equation is the following ([30]):where const. Clearly, the subspace
is an invariant subspace under
and
, as
We suppose the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are unknown functions to be determined;
and
satisfy the system of differential equations as follows:
Thus Equation (
62) has the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
Thus Equation (
62) has the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
Thus Equation (
62) has the exact solution that follows:
where
and
are arbitrary constants.
The subspace
is invariant under
and
, as
Thus we obtain infinitely many invariant subspaces for Equation (
62), which in turn yield infinitely many solutions.