Two unusual time-integral conditional regularity results are presented for
the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations. The ideas are based on
L2m-norms of the vorticity, denoted by Ωm(t), and particularly
on Dm=Ωmαm, where αm=2m/(4m−3) for m≥1. The first result, more appropriate for the unforced case, can be stated
simply : if there exists an 1≤m<∞ for which the integral condition
is satisfied (Zm=Dm+1/Dm) ∫0tln(c4,m1+Zm)dτ≥0 then no singularity can occur on [0,t]. The
constant c4,m↘2 for large m. Secondly, for the forced case, by
imposing a critical \textit{lower} bound on ∫0tDmdτ, no
singularity can occur in Dm(t) for \textit{large} initial data. Movement
across this critical lower bound shows how solutions can behave intermittently,
in analogy with a relaxation oscillator. Potential singularities that drive
∫0tDmdτ over this critical value can be ruled out whereas
other types cannot.Comment: A frequency was missing in the definition of D_{m} in (I5) v3. 11
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