
This work develops a theoretical framework for Partial Difference Equations (P∆E) as a natural mathematical language for modeling discrete- time, discrete-space systems. Motivated by the limitations of continuous partial differential equations (PDE) in representing inherently discrete phenomena, we begin by defining P∆E in terms of discrete function spaces and shift operators, contrasting them with ordinary difference equations (O∆E) and PDE, and clarifying the scope of our study. We then examine linear P∆E, outlining their main types, providing formal definitions, and presenting selected analytic solutions in simple cases. Building on this, we introduce the discrete functional analytic setting: discrete function spaces, Hilbert space structure, and discrete operators, including difference and shift operators, and study their alge- braic and adjoint properties. The discrete Green’s function is also defined within this framework. As a demonstration of the framework’s unifying power, we reformulate a wide range of well-known discrete models, including elementary cellular automata, coupled map lattices, Conway’s Game of Life, the Abelian sandpile model, the Olami–Feder–Christensen earthquake model, forest- fire models, the Ising model, the Kuramoto Firefly Model, the Greenberg–Hastings Model, and the Langton’s ant as explicit P∆E. For each case, we focus on obtaining a concise and mathematically elegant formulation rather than detailed dynamical analysis. Finally, we compare the “discrete universe” of P∆E with the contin- uous universe of PDE, highlighting their structural parallels and their respective connections to discrete mathematics and continuous analysis. This reveals P∆E and PDE as mathematical “twins”, analogous in form yet rooted in fundamentally different underlying mathematics. The generality of the P∆E formalism suggests broad applicability, from modeling biological and ecological processes to analyzing complex networks, emergent computation, and other spatiotemporally extended systems.
discrete dynamical system, sandpile model, Applied Mathematics, game of life, hilbert space, Computer Science and Mathematics, difference equations, partial difference equations, self-organized criticality, complex system, topological defects, synchronization
discrete dynamical system, sandpile model, Applied Mathematics, game of life, hilbert space, Computer Science and Mathematics, difference equations, partial difference equations, self-organized criticality, complex system, topological defects, synchronization
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