3,855 research outputs found
Partial regularity of Leray-Hopf weak solutions to the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations with hyperdissipation
We show that if is a Leray-Hopf weak solution to the incompressible
Navier--Stokes equations with hyperdissipation then there
exists a set such that remains bounded outside of
at each blow-up time, the Hausdorff dimension of is bounded above by and its box-counting dimension is bounded by . Our approach is inspired by the ideas of Katz & Pavlovi\'c
(Geom. Funct. Anal., 2002).Comment: 37 pages, 3 figure
A sufficient integral condition for local regularity of solutions to the surface growth model
The surface growth model, , is a
one-dimensional fourth order equation, which shares a number of striking
similarities with the three-dimensional incompressible Navier--Stokes
equations, including the results regarding existence and uniqueness of
solutions and the partial regularity theory. Here we show that a weak solution
of this equation is smooth on a space-time cylinder if the Serrin condition
is satisfied, where are such that
either or , .Comment: 18 page
Weak solutions to the Navier-Stokes inequality with arbitrary energy profiles
In a recent paper, Buckmaster & Vicol (arXiv:1709.10033) used the method of
convex integration to construct weak solutions to the 3D incompressible
Navier-Stokes equations such that for a given
non-negative and smooth energy profile . However, it is
not known whether it is possible to extend this method to construct nonunique
suitable weak solutions (that is weak solutions satisfying the strong energy
inequality (SEI) and the local energy inequality (LEI)), Leray-Hopf weak
solutions (that is weak solutions satisfying the SEI), or at least to exclude
energy profiles that are not nonincreasing. In this paper we are concerned with
weak solutions to the Navier-Stokes inequality on , that is
vector fields that satisfy both the SEI and the LEI (but not necessarily solve
the Navier-Stokes equations). Given and a nonincreasing energy profile
we construct weak solution to the Navier-Stokes
inequality that are localised in space and whose energy profile stays arbitrarily close to for all . Our
method applies only to nonincreasing energy profiles. The relevance of such
solutions is that, despite not satisfying the Navier-Stokes equations, they
satisfy the partial regularity theory of Caffarelli, Kohn & Nirenberg (Comm.
Pure Appl. Math., 1982). In fact, Scheffer's constructions of weak solutions to
the Navier-Stokes inequality with blow-ups (Comm. Math. Phys., 1985 & 1987)
show that the Caffarelli, Kohn & Nirenberg's theory is sharp for such
solutions. Our approach gives an indication of a number of ideas used by
Scheffer. Moreover, it can be used to obtain a stronger result than Scheffer's.
Namely, we obtain weak solutions to the Navier-Stokes inequality with both
blow-up and a prescribed energy profile.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1709.0060
Leray's fundamental work on the Navier-Stokes equations: a modern review of "Sur le mouvement d'un liquide visqueux emplissant l'espace"
This article offers a modern perspective which exposes the many contributions
of Leray in his celebrated work on the Navier--Stokes equations from 1934.
Although the importance of his work is widely acknowledged, the precise
contents of his paper are perhaps less well known. The purpose of this article
is to fill this gap. We follow Leray's results in detail: we prove local
existence of strong solutions starting from divergence-free initial data that
is either smooth, or belongs to , (with ),
as well as lower bounds on the norms ,
() as approaches a putative blow-up time. We show global
existence of a weak solution and weak-strong uniqueness. We present Leray's
characterisation of the set of singular times for the weak solution, from which
we deduce that its upper box-counting dimension is at most .
Throughout the text we provide additional details and clarifications for the
modern reader and we expand on all ideas left implicit in the original work,
some of which we have not found in the literature. We use some modern
mathematical tools to bypass some technical details in Leray's work, and thus
expose the elegance of his approach.Comment: 81 pages. All comments are welcom
KMS states on Nica-Toeplitz algebras of product systems
We investigate KMS states of Fowler's Nica-Toeplitz algebra
associated to a compactly aligned product system over a semigroup of
Hilbert bimodules. This analysis relies on restrictions of these states to the
core algebra which satisfy appropriate scaling conditions. The concept of
product system of finite type is introduced. If is a lattice ordered
group and is a product system of finite type over satisfying certain
coherence properties, we construct KMS states of \NT(X) associated to
a scalar dynamics from traces on the coefficient algebra of the product system.
Our results were motivated by, and generalize some of the results of Laca and
Raeburn obtained for the Toeplitz algebra of the affine semigroup over the
natural numbers.Comment: Changes to Proposition 3.1 and Theorem 4.10. Major changes to section
5 starting from (and including) new Lemma 5.4 to new Example 5.1
The Cuntz Algebra Q_N and C*-Algebras of Product Systems
We consider a product system over the multiplicative semigroup N^x of Hilbert
bimodules which is implicit in work of S. Yamashita and of the second named
author. We prove directly, using universal properties, that the associated
Nica-Toeplitz algebra is an extension of the C^*-algebra Q_N introduced
recently by Cuntz.Comment: 13 page
What drives galactic magnetism?
We aim to use statistical analysis of a large number of various galaxies to
probe, model, and understand relations between different galaxy properties and
magnetic fields. We have compiled a sample of 55 galaxies including low-mass
dwarf and Magellanic-types, normal spirals and several massive starbursts, and
applied principal component analysis (PCA) and regression methods to assess the
impact of various galaxy properties on the observed magnetic fields. According
to PCA the global galaxy parameters (like HI, H2, and dynamical mass, star
formation rate (SFR), near-infrared luminosity, size, and rotational velocity)
are all mutually correlated and can be reduced to a single principal component.
Further PCA performed for global and intensive (not size related) properties of
galaxies (such as gas density, and surface density of the star formation rate,
SSFR), indicates that magnetic field strength B is connected mainly to the
intensive parameters, while the global parameters have only weak relationships
with B. We find that the tightest relationship of B is with SSFR, which is
described by a power-law with an index of 0.33+-0.03. The observed weaker
associations of B with galaxy dynamical mass and the rotational velocity we
interpret as indirect ones, resulting from the observed connection of the
global SFR with the available total H2 mass in galaxies. Using our sample we
constructed a diagram of B across the Hubble sequence which reveals that high
values of B are not restricted by the Hubble type. However, weaker fields
appear exclusively in later Hubble types and B as low as about 5muG is not seen
among typical spirals. The processes of generation of magnetic field in the
dwarf and Magellanic-type galaxies are similar to those in the massive spirals
and starbursts and are mainly coupled to local star-formation activity
involving the small-scale dynamo mechanism.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
John Wheeler, relativity, and quantum information
In spring 1952, as John Wheeler neared the end of design work for the first thermonuclear explosion, he plotted a radical change of research direction: from particles and atomic nuclei to general relativity
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