TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigating the truncated fractional telegraph equation in engineering
T2 - Solitary wave solutions, chaotic and sensitivity analysis
AU - Younas, Usman
AU - Muhammad, Jan
AU - Murad, Muhammad Amin S.
AU - Almutairi, D. K.
AU - Khan, Aziz
AU - Abdeljawad, Thabet
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Communication systems, especially radio frequency and microwave systems are significant to global society. Optimizing these systems involves using the telegraph equation to determine power and signal losses. This equation is essential in theoretical, mathematical, and nonlinear research involving plasma physics, and is used to describe communication lines, the expansion of circulating blood pressure waves, and the random motion of one-dimensional bugs. This study investigates the dynamic behavior of the fractional telegraph equation with M-fractional derivative. The wave transformation is applied, and the model is transferred to an ordinary differential equation. Furthermore, two recently developed integration tools known as the generalized Arnous approach and modified F-expansion method have been adopted for analyzing the studied model. A variety of solitary wave solutions are extracted in different forms. Moreover, the fractional parametric effect has been observed graphically in various plots depicting wave dynamics. Another aspect of this study is to explore the telegraph by the chaotic and sensitivity analysis. For this purpose, the Galilean transformation is applied, and a variety of graphs in 2D phase portraits and time-series analyses have been sketched. The algorithms of the proposed techniques are outstanding allowing them to resolve exact soliton solutions in complex nonlinear structures with high precision in an efficient and effective manner. The results obtained may enhance the understanding of nonlinear system dynamics and validate current methods, significantly contributing to the fields of nonlinear science and wave phenomena. The analysis is expected to benefit numerous scientific models and related issues, making a significant contribution to nonlinear systems.
AB - Communication systems, especially radio frequency and microwave systems are significant to global society. Optimizing these systems involves using the telegraph equation to determine power and signal losses. This equation is essential in theoretical, mathematical, and nonlinear research involving plasma physics, and is used to describe communication lines, the expansion of circulating blood pressure waves, and the random motion of one-dimensional bugs. This study investigates the dynamic behavior of the fractional telegraph equation with M-fractional derivative. The wave transformation is applied, and the model is transferred to an ordinary differential equation. Furthermore, two recently developed integration tools known as the generalized Arnous approach and modified F-expansion method have been adopted for analyzing the studied model. A variety of solitary wave solutions are extracted in different forms. Moreover, the fractional parametric effect has been observed graphically in various plots depicting wave dynamics. Another aspect of this study is to explore the telegraph by the chaotic and sensitivity analysis. For this purpose, the Galilean transformation is applied, and a variety of graphs in 2D phase portraits and time-series analyses have been sketched. The algorithms of the proposed techniques are outstanding allowing them to resolve exact soliton solutions in complex nonlinear structures with high precision in an efficient and effective manner. The results obtained may enhance the understanding of nonlinear system dynamics and validate current methods, significantly contributing to the fields of nonlinear science and wave phenomena. The analysis is expected to benefit numerous scientific models and related issues, making a significant contribution to nonlinear systems.
KW - Galilean transformation
KW - Generalized Arnous method
KW - M-fractional derivatives
KW - Modified F-expansion method
KW - Telegraph equation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85218636134&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.rineng.2025.104489
DO - 10.1016/j.rineng.2025.104489
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85218636134
SN - 2590-1230
VL - 25
JO - Results in Engineering
JF - Results in Engineering
M1 - 104489
ER -