The second-grade fluid equations are a model for viscoelastic fluids, with
two parameters: α>0, corresponding to the elastic response, and ν>0, corresponding to viscosity. Formally setting these parameters to 0
reduces the equations to the incompressible Euler equations of ideal fluid
flow. In this article we study the limits α,ν→0 of solutions of
the second-grade fluid system, in a smooth, bounded, two-dimensional domain
with no-slip boundary conditions. This class of problems interpolates between
the Euler-α model (ν=0), for which the authors recently proved
convergence to the solution of the incompressible Euler equations, and the
Navier-Stokes case (α=0), for which the vanishing viscosity limit is
an important open problem. We prove three results. First, we establish
convergence of the solutions of the second-grade model to those of the Euler
equations provided ν=O(α2), as α→0, extending
the main result in [19]. Second, we prove equivalence between convergence (of
the second-grade fluid equations to the Euler equations) and vanishing of the
energy dissipation in a suitably thin region near the boundary, in the
asymptotic regime ν=O(α6/5), ν/α2→∞
as α→0. This amounts to a convergence criterion similar to the
well-known Kato criterion for the vanishing viscosity limit of the
Navier-Stokes equations to the Euler equations. Finally, we obtain an extension
of Kato's classical criterion to the second-grade fluid model, valid if α=O(ν3/2), as ν→0. The proof of all these results
relies on energy estimates and boundary correctors, following the original idea
by Kato.Comment: 20pages,1figur