Remarks on the minimizing geodesic problem in inviscid incompressible fluid mechanics
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1949411
DOI10.1007/s00526-012-0510-7zbMath1282.35291arXiv1011.1104MaRDI QIDQ1949411
Publication date: 7 May 2013
Published in: Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1011.1104
35Q35: PDEs in connection with fluid mechanics
49N60: Regularity of solutions in optimal control
49J45: Methods involving semicontinuity and convergence; relaxation
Related Items
The Camassa-Holm equation as an incompressible Euler equation: a geometric point of view, Continuous dependence of the pressure field with respect to endpoints for ideal incompressible fluids, Various formulations and approximations of incompressible fluid motions in porous media
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The dual least action problem for an ideal, incompressible fluid
- Generalized solutions and hydrostatic approximation of the Euler equations
- Generalized solutions for the Euler equations in one and two dimensions
- Geodesics in the space of measure-preserving maps and plans
- Generalized fluid flows, their approximation and applications
- Topological methods in hydrodynamics
- Remarks on the derivation of the hydrostatic Euler equations.
- \(L^p\) approximation of maps by diffeomorphisms
- On the regularity of the pressure field of Brenier's weak solutions to incompressible Euler equations
- Groups of diffeomorphisms and the motion of an incompressible fluid
- The Least Action Principle and the Related Concept of Generalized Flows for Incompressible Perfect Fluids
- Minimal geodesics on groups of volume-preserving maps and generalized solutions of the Euler equations
- Relaxation of Euler equations and hydrodynamic instabilities
- Homogeneous hydrostatic flows with convex velocity profiles
- On the derivation of homogeneous hydrostatic equations
- ON THE GEOMETRY OF THE GROUP OF DIFFEOMORPHISMS AND THE DYNAMICS OF AN IDEAL INCOMPRESSIBLE FLUID