43 research outputs found

    Optimal bounds for ancient caloric functions

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    For any manifold with polynomial volume growth, we show: The dimension of the space of ancient caloric functions with polynomial growth is bounded by the degree of growth times the dimension of harmonic functions with the same growth. As a consequence, we get a sharp bound for the dimension of ancient caloric functions on any space where Yau's 1974 conjecture about polynomial growth harmonic functions holds.Comment: A stronger sharp dimension bound is added which is an equality on Euclidean space. To appear in Duke Math. Journa

    The singular set of mean curvature flow with generic singularities

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    A mean curvature flow starting from a closed embedded hypersurface in Rn+1R^{n+1} must develop singularities. We show that if the flow has only generic singularities, then the space-time singular set is contained in finitely many compact embedded (nβˆ’1)(n-1)-dimensional Lipschitz submanifolds plus a set of dimension at most nβˆ’2n-2. If the initial hypersurface is mean convex, then all singularities are generic and the results apply. In R3R^3 and R4R^4, we show that for almost all times the evolving hypersurface is completely smooth and any connected component of the singular set is entirely contained in a time-slice. For 22 or 33-convex hypersurfaces in all dimensions, the same arguments lead to the same conclusion: the flow is completely smooth at almost all times and connected components of the singular set are contained in time-slices. A key technical point is a strong {\emph{parabolic}} Reifenberg property that we show in all dimensions and for all flows with only generic singularities. We also show that the entire flow clears out very rapidly after a generic singularity. These results are essentially optimal

    Differentiability of the arrival time

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    For a monotonically advancing front, the arrival time is the time when the front reaches a given point. We show that it is twice differentiable everywhere with uniformly bounded second derivative. It is smooth away from the critical points where the equation is degenerate. We also show that the critical set has finite codimensional two Hausdorff measure. For a monotonically advancing front, the arrival time is equivalent to the level set method; a priori not even differentiable but only satisfies the equation in the viscosity sense. Using that it is twice differentiable and that we can identify the Hessian at critical points, we show that it satisfies the equation in the classical sense. The arrival time has a game theoretic interpretation. For the linear heat equation, there is a game theoretic interpretation that relates to Black-Scholes option pricing. From variations of the Sard and Lojasiewicz theorems, we relate differentiability to whether or not singularities all occur at only finitely many times for flows
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