arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1409.7854 [math.AP]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Vanishing Viscosity Solutions of the Compressible Euler Equations with Spherical Symmetry and Large Initial Data

Gui-Qiang G. Chen, Mikhail Perepelitsa

Published 2014-09-27Version 1

We are concerned with spherically symmetric solutions of the Euler equations for multidimensional compressible fluids, which are motivated by many important physical situations. Various evidences indicate that spherically symmetric solutions of the compressible Euler equations may blow up near the origin at certain time under some circumstance. The central feature is the strengthening of waves as they move radially inward. A longstanding open, fundamental question is whether concentration could form at the origin. In this paper, we develop a method of vanishing viscosity and related estimate techniques for viscosity approximate solutions, and establish the convergence of the approximate solutions to a global finite-energy entropy solution of the compressible Euler equations with spherical symmetry and large initial data. This indicates that concentration does not form in the vanishing viscosity limit, even though the density may blow up at certain time. To achieve this, we first construct global smooth solutions of appropriate initial-boundary value problems for the Euler equations with designed viscosity terms, an approximate pressure function, and boundary conditions, and then we establish the strong convergence of the viscosity approximate solutions to a finite-energy entropy solutions of the Euler equations.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:2005.13725 [math.AP] (Published 2020-05-28)
Global Solutions of the Compressible Euler Equations with Large Initial Data of Spherical Symmetry and Positive Far-Field Density
arXiv:1204.0460 [math.AP] (Published 2012-04-02)
Shock-free Solutions of the Compressible Euler Equations
arXiv:2406.00200 [math.AP] (Published 2024-05-31)
Time-periodic solutions of the compressible Euler equations and the Nonlinear Theory of Sound