Spectral deviations for the damped wave equation (Q707550)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 10:57, 30 January 2024 by Import240129110113 (talk | contribs) (Added link to MaRDI item.)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Spectral deviations for the damped wave equation
scientific article

    Statements

    Spectral deviations for the damped wave equation (English)
    0 references
    8 October 2010
    0 references
    Let \((M,g)\) be a smooth compact Riemannian manifold without boundary and \(a\) a \(C^{\infty}\) real valued function on \(M\). The ``damped wave equation'' \[ (\partial^2_t- \Delta +2a(x)\partial_t)v=0 \tag{1} \] for \(t\in\mathbb R\) and \(x\in M\) is studied. The term ``damped'' applies to the case when \(a\geq 0\) means that the energy is decreasing. The author is interested in the stationary solutions, that is, solutions of the form \(v(t,x)=e^{it\tau}u(x)\) for some \(\tau \in\mathbb R\). This means that \(u\) must satisfy \[ (-\Delta -\tau^2+2i a\tau)u=0. \tag{2} \] Equivalently, \(\tau\) is an eigenvalue of the operator \(\left(\begin{smallmatrix} 0&I\\ -\Delta& 2ia \end{smallmatrix}\right)\) acting on \(H^1(M)\times L^2(M)\). For \(a=0\), this operator is the (anti-selfadjoint) wave operator; but for \(a \neq 0\), the operator is not normal anymore. It is known that its spectrum is discrete and consists of a sequence \((\tau _n)\) with \(\text{Im}(\tau _n)\) bounded and \(|\text{Re}(\tau _n)| \to +\infty\). Here, \(\text{Im}(\tau _n) \in [2 \min (\inf a,0), 2\max(\sup a,0)]\) if \(\text{Re}(\tau _n)=0,\) and \(\text{Im}(\tau _n) \in [\inf a,\sup a]\) if \(\text{Re}(\tau _n)\neq 0\). Obviously, \(-\overline{\tau}_n\) is an eigenvalue if \(\tau _n\) is one, i.e., the spectrum is symmetric with respect to the imaginary axis. A Weyl-type fractal upper bound for the spectrum of the damped wave equation on a negatively curved compact manifold is proved. The number of eigenvalues in a given horizontal strip deviating from the indicated typical behaviour is counted; the exponent that appears naturally is the ``entropy'' that gives the deviation rate from the Birkhoff ergodic theorem for the geodesic flow. A Weyl-type lower bound is not obtained; but, in the particular case of arithmetic surfaces, and for a strong enough damping, using the trace formula, some result in this direction is established.
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    damped wave equation
    0 references
    Weyl low
    0 references
    eigenvalues of selfajoint operator
    0 references