On the inviscid Proudman-Johnson equation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1046453
DOI10.3792/pjaa.85.81zbMath1179.35236OpenAlexW2091623169WikidataQ58869999 ScholiaQ58869999MaRDI QIDQ1046453
Marcus Wunsch, Adrian Constantin
Publication date: 22 December 2009
Published in: Proceedings of the Japan Academy. Series A (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.3792/pjaa.85.81
PDEs in connection with fluid mechanics (35Q35) Incompressible inviscid fluids (76B99) Blow-up in context of PDEs (35B44)
Related Items
RESTRICTIONS ON THE GEOMETRY OF THE PERIODIC VORTICITY EQUATION ⋮ The generalized Proudman-Johnson equation revisited ⋮ Blow-up of solutions to the generalized inviscid Proudman-Johnson equation ⋮ Global existence for the generalized two-component Hunter-Saxton system ⋮ One-parameter solutions of the Euler-Arnold equation on the contactomorphism group ⋮ Global estimates and blow-up criteria for the generalized Hunter-Saxton system ⋮ The role of initial curvature in solutions to the generalized inviscid Proudman-Johnson equation ⋮ Global and singular solutions to the generalized Proudman-Johnson equation ⋮ On the global well-posedness of the inviscid generalized Proudman-Johnson equation using flow map arguments ⋮ Blowup in stagnation-point form solutions of the inviscid 2d Boussinesq equations
Cites Work
- Well-posedness of the generalized Proudman-Johnson equation without viscosity
- Remarks on the breakdown of smooth solutions for the 3-D Euler equations
- Wave breaking for nonlinear nonlocal shallow water equations
- Some similarity solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations and related topics
- Global solutions for quasilinear parabolic problems
- Statistical mechanics for truncations of the Burgers-Hopf equation: a model for intrinsic stochastic behavior with scaling
- On the Euler equations of incompressible fluids
- Boundary-layer growth near a rear stagnation point
- Global existence of solutions to the Proudman-Johnson equation
- Limiting case of the Sobolev inequality in BMO, with application to the Euler equations