Partial Differential Equation LANguage - definição. O que é Partial Differential Equation LANguage. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é Partial Differential Equation LANguage - definição

DIFFERENTIAL EQUATION FOR WHICH SOME NUMERICAL METHODS USED TO SOLVE IT ARE UNSUSTAINABLE
Stiff differential equation; Stiff ordinary differential equation; Stiff partial differential equation; Stiff problem; Stiff Differential Equation; Stiff ODE; A-stability; Stiff system; A-stable; Stiffness (mathematics); Stiffness ratio

Partial Differential Equation LANguage      
(PDELAN) ["An Extension of Fortran Containing Finite Difference Operators", J. Gary et al, Soft Prac & Exp 2(4) (Oct 1972)].
Differential equation         
MATHEMATICAL EQUATION INVOLVING DERIVATIVES OF AN UNKNOWN FUNCTION
Examples of differential equations; Differential equations/Examples; Differential equations of mathematical physics; Differential equations from Mathematical Physics; Differential equations from outside physics; Differental equations; Diff eq; Differential Equations; DiffyEq; Diffyeq; Separable ordinary differential equation; Exact first-order ordinary differential equation; Order (differential equation); Diff eq'n; Diffeq; Second order equation; Differential equations; Second-order differential equation; Higher order differential equation; Degree of a differential equation; Solutions of differential equations; Types of differential equations; Applications of differential equations; Differential Equation; History of differential equations; Differential equation solvers; Order of differential equation
In mathematics, a differential equation is an equation that relates one or more unknown functions and their derivatives. In applications, the functions generally represent physical quantities, the derivatives represent their rates of change, and the differential equation defines a relationship between the two.
Degree of a differential equation         
MATHEMATICAL EQUATION INVOLVING DERIVATIVES OF AN UNKNOWN FUNCTION
Examples of differential equations; Differential equations/Examples; Differential equations of mathematical physics; Differential equations from Mathematical Physics; Differential equations from outside physics; Differental equations; Diff eq; Differential Equations; DiffyEq; Diffyeq; Separable ordinary differential equation; Exact first-order ordinary differential equation; Order (differential equation); Diff eq'n; Diffeq; Second order equation; Differential equations; Second-order differential equation; Higher order differential equation; Degree of a differential equation; Solutions of differential equations; Types of differential equations; Applications of differential equations; Differential Equation; History of differential equations; Differential equation solvers; Order of differential equation
In mathematics, the degree of a differential equation is the power of its highest derivative, after the equation has been made rational and integral in all of its derivatives.Order and Degree General Terms of Ordinary Differential Equations.

Wikipédia

Stiff equation

In mathematics, a stiff equation is a differential equation for which certain numerical methods for solving the equation are numerically unstable, unless the step size is taken to be extremely small. It has proven difficult to formulate a precise definition of stiffness, but the main idea is that the equation includes some terms that can lead to rapid variation in the solution.

When integrating a differential equation numerically, one would expect the requisite step size to be relatively small in a region where the solution curve displays much variation and to be relatively large where the solution curve straightens out to approach a line with slope nearly zero. For some problems this is not the case. In order for a numerical method to give a reliable solution to the differential system sometimes the step size is required to be at an unacceptably small level in a region where the solution curve is very smooth. The phenomenon is known as stiffness. In some cases there may be two different problems with the same solution, yet one is not stiff and the other is. The phenomenon cannot therefore be a property of the exact solution, since this is the same for both problems, and must be a property of the differential system itself. Such systems are thus known as stiff systems.