Decay and analyticity of solitary waves (Q1364510)
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English | Decay and analyticity of solitary waves |
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Decay and analyticity of solitary waves (English)
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18 December 1997
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We consider detailed aspects of solitary-wave solutions of nonlinear evolution equations including the Euler equations for the propagation of gravity waves on the surface of an ideal, incompressible, inviscid fluid. Two properties have occupied attention. The first, described already in an earlier paper of the same authors, concerns the regularity of these travelling waves [cf. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 27, 725-737 (1996; Zbl 0851.35117)]. In the context of certain classes of model equations for long waves in nonlinear dispersive media, the authors showed that solitary waves are obtained as the restriction to the real axis of functions analytic in a strip of the form \(\{z:-a <Im (z)<a\}\) in the complex plane. In this direction, the scope of their previous discussion of model equations is broadened considerably. Moreover, it is also shown that solitary-wave solutions of the full Euler equations have the properties that the free surface is given by the restriction to the real axis of a function analytic in a strip in the complex plane and the velocity potential is the restriction to the flow domain of a function that is analytic in an open set in complex 2-space \(\mathbb{C}^2\). The second issue considered is the asymptotic decay of solitary waves to a quiescent state away from their principal elevation. A theorem pertaining to the evanescence of solutions of certain types of one-dimensional convolution equations is formulated and proved, showing that decay is related to the smoothness of the Fourier transform of the convolution kernel \(k\), as well as the nonlinearity present in the equation. It is demonstrated that if the Fourier transform \(\widehat k\in H^s\) for some \(s>1/2\), then the rate of decay of a solution is at least as fast as that of the kernel \(k\) itself. This result is used to establish asymptotic properties of solitary-wave solutions of a broad class of model equations, and of solitary-wave solutions of the full Euler equations.
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ideal fluid
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incompressible fluid
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solitary-wave solutions
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nonlinear evolution equations
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Euler equations
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propagation of gravity waves
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inviscid fluid
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decay
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Fourier transform
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asymptotic properties
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