Date
Fri, 02 May 2008
Time
12:00 - 13:00
Location
L1
Speaker
Dr Galina Filipuk

Any nonlinear equation of the form y''=\sum_{n=0}^N a_n(z)y^n

has a (generally branched) solution with leading order behaviour

proportional to

(z-z_0)^{-2/(N-1)} about a point z_0, where the coefficients a_n are analytic at z_0 and a_N(z_0)\ne 0. Jointly with R.G. Halburd we consider the subclass of equations for which each possible leading order term of

this

form corresponds to a one-parameter family of solutions represented near

z_0

by a Laurent series in fractional powers of z-z_0. For this class of

equations we show that the only movable singularities that can be reached

by

analytic continuation along finite-length curves are of the algebraic type

just described. This work generalizes previous results of S. Shimomura.

The only other possible kind of movable singularity that might occur is an

accumulation point of algebraic singularities that can be reached by

analytic continuation along infinitely long paths ending at a finite point

in the complex plane. This behaviour cannot occur for constant coefficient

equations in the class considered. However, an example of R. A. Smith

shows

that such singularities do occur in solutions of a simple autonomous

second-order differential equation outside the class we consider here.

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