Abstract

Two problems of mass spectrometry, namely, involving the model of chemical kinetics of cluster formation and the model of the pseudopotential of stroboscopic samples of coordinates and ion velocities in quadrupole radio frequency fields, are considered as the examples in investigating the relationship between discrete models with finite-difference equations and continuum models with point derivatives. In developing continuum models, integer indices are replaced by real parameters, and finite-difference relations are replaced by approximate differential relations involving derivatives. It is shown that this procedure is not reliable: the discrete model and the continuum model can diverge globally, even if for intuitive reasons it is expected that the models should be close. As a result, the transfer of the conclusions obtained for the approximate continuum model to the exact physical model can lead to conceptually significant errors and requires the investigator to be careful. In particular, the continuum model of the chemical kinetics of cluster formation and the continuum model of the pseudopotential of stroboscopic samples of coordinates and ion velocities in quadrupole radio frequency fields, considered as an example, are both insolvent.

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