1,074 research outputs found
Moore-Gibson-Thompson equation with memory, part II: general decay of energy
We study a temporally third order (Moore-Gibson-Thompson) equation with a
memory term. Previously it is known that, in non-critical regime, the global
solutions exist and the energy functionals decay to zero. More precisely, it is
known that the energy has exponential decay if the memory kernel decays
exponentially. The current work is a generalization of the previous one (Part
I) in that it allows the memory kernel to be more general and shows that the
energy decays the same way as the memory kernel does, exponentially or not.Comment: 22 page
Controllability of a viscoelastic plate using one boundary control in displacement or bending
In this paper we consider a viscoelastic plate (linear viscoelasticity of the
Maxwell-Boltzmann type) and we compare its controllability properties with the
(known) controllability of a purely elastic plate (the control acts on the
boundary displacement or bending). By combining operator and moment methods, we
prove that the viscoelastic plate inherits the controllability properties of
the purely elastic plate
Feedback control of the acoustic pressure in ultrasonic wave propagation
Classical models for the propagation of ultrasound waves are the Westervelt
equation, the Kuznetsov and the Khokhlov-Zabolotskaya-Kuznetsov equations. The
Jordan-Moore-Gibson-Thompson equation is a prominent example of a Partial
Differential Equation (PDE) model which describes the acoustic velocity
potential in ultrasound wave propagation, where the paradox of infinite speed
of propagation of thermal signals is eliminated; the use of the constitutive
Cattaneo law for the heat flux, in place of the Fourier law, accounts for its
being of third order in time. Aiming at the understanding of the fully
quasilinear PDE, a great deal of attention has been recently devoted to its
linearization -- referred to in the literature as the Moore-Gibson-Thompson
equation -- whose mathematical analysis is also of independent interest, posing
already several questions and challenges. In this work we consider and solve a
quadratic control problem associated with the linear equation, formulated
consistently with the goal of keeping the acoustic pressure close to a
reference pressure during ultrasound excitation, as required in medical and
industrial applications. While optimal control problems with smooth controls
have been considered in the recent literature, we aim at relying on controls
which are just in time; this leads to a singular control problem and to
non-standard Riccati equations. In spite of the unfavourable combination of the
semigroup describing the free dynamics that is not analytic, with the
challenging pattern displayed by the dynamics subject to boundary control, a
feedback synthesis of the optimal control as well as well-posedness of operator
Riccati equations are established.Comment: 39 pages; submitte
Optimal boundary control with critical penalization for a PDE model of fluid-solid interactions
We study the finite-horizon optimal control problem with quadratic
functionals for an established fluid-structure interaction model. The coupled
PDE system under investigation comprises a parabolic (the fluid) and a
hyperbolic (the solid) dynamics; the coupling occurs at the interface between
the regions occupied by the fluid and the solid. We establish several trace
regularity results for the fluid component of the system, which are then
applied to show well-posedness of the Differential Riccati Equations arising in
the optimization problem. This yields the feedback synthesis of the unique
optimal control, under a very weak constraint on the observation operator; in
particular, the present analysis allows general functionals, such as the
integral of the natural energy of the physical system. Furthermore, this work
confirms that the theory developed in Acquistapace et al. [Adv. Differential
Equations, 2005] -- crucially utilized here -- encompasses widely differing PDE
problems, from thermoelastic systems to models of acoustic-structure and, now,
fluid-structure interactions.Comment: 22 pages, submitted; v2: misprints corrected, a remark added in
section
Maximal regularity and global existence of solutions to a quasilinear thermoelastic plate system
We consider a quasilinear PDE system which models nonlinear vibrations of a
thermoelastic plate defined on a bounded domain in R^n. Well-posedness of
solutions reconstructing maximal parabolic regularity in nonlinear
thermoelastic plates is established. In addition, exponential decay rates for
strong solutions are also shown.Comment: 14 page
Eliminating flutter for clamped von Karman plates immersed in subsonic flows
We address the long-time behavior of a non-rotational von Karman plate in an
inviscid potential flow. The model arises in aeroelasticity and models the
interaction between a thin, nonlinear panel and a flow of gas in which it is
immersed [6, 21, 23]. Recent results in [16, 18] show that the plate component
of the dynamics (in the presence of a physical plate nonlinearity) converge to
a global compact attracting set of finite dimension; these results were
obtained in the absence of mechanical damping of any type. Here we show that,
by incorporating mechanical damping the full flow-plate system, full
trajectories---both plate and flow---converge strongly to (the set of)
stationary states. Weak convergence results require "minimal" interior damping,
and strong convergence of the dynamics are shown with sufficiently large
damping. We require the existence of a "good" energy balance equation, which is
only available when the flows are subsonic. Our proof is based on first showing
the convergence properties for regular solutions, which in turn requires
propagation of initial regularity on the infinite horizon. Then, we utilize the
exponential decay of the difference of two plate trajectories to show that full
flow-plate trajectories are uniform-in-time Hadamard continuous. This allows us
to pass convergence properties of smooth initial data to finite energy type
initial data. Physically, our results imply that flutter (a non-static end
behavior) does not occur in subsonic dynamics. While such results were known
for rotational (compact/regular) plate dynamics [14] (and references therein),
the result presented herein is the first such result obtained for
non-regularized---the most physically relevant---models
Exponential Decay of Quasilinear Maxwell Equations with Interior Conductivity
We consider a quasilinear nonhomogeneous, anisotropic Maxwell system in a
bounded smooth domain of with a strictly positive conductivity
subject to the boundary conditions of a perfect conductor. Under appropriate
regularity conditions, adopting a classical -Sobolev solution framework,
a nonlinear energy barrier estimate is established for local-in-time
-solutions to the Maxwell system by a proper combination of higher-order
energy and observability-type estimates under a smallness assumption on the
initial data. Technical complications due to quasilinearity, anisotropy and the
lack of solenoidality, etc., are addressed. Finally, provided the initial data
are small, the barrier method is applied to prove that local solutions exist
globally and exhibit an exponential decay rate.Comment: 24 page
Long-Time Behavior of Quasilinear Thermoelastic Kirchhoff-Love Plates with Second Sound
We consider an initial-boundary-value problem for a thermoelastic Kirchhoff &
Love plate, thermally insulated and simply supported on the boundary,
incorporating rotational inertia and a quasilinear hypoelastic response, while
the heat effects are modeled using the hyperbolic Maxwell-Cattaneo-Vernotte law
giving rise to a 'second sound' effect. We study the local well-posedness of
the resulting quasilinear mixed-order hyperbolic system in a suitable solution
class of smooth functions mapping into Sobolev -spaces. Exploiting the
sole source of energy dissipation entering the system through the hyperbolic
heat flux moment, provided the initial data are small in a lower topology
(basic energy level corresponding to weak solutions), we prove a nonlinear
stabilizability estimate furnishing global existence & uniqueness and
exponential decay of classical solutions.Comment: 46 page
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