On the regularity of the pressure field of Brenier's weak solutions to incompressible Euler equations

From MaRDI portal
Publication:2480835

DOI10.1007/s00526-007-0123-8zbMath1138.49031OpenAlexW2022058632WikidataQ112632389 ScholiaQ112632389MaRDI QIDQ2480835

Alessio Figalli, Luigi Ambrosio

Publication date: 3 April 2008

Published in: Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00526-007-0123-8




Related Items

Sobolev regularity for first order mean field gamesRegularity via duality in calculus of variations and degenerate elliptic PDEsGlobal-in-time regularity via duality for congestion-penalized Mean Field GamesThe planning problem in mean field games as regularized mass transportRemarks on the minimizing geodesic problem in inviscid incompressible fluid mechanicsLecture notes on variational mean field gamesAn entropic interpolation problem for incompressible viscous fluidsOptimal density evolution with congestion: L bounds via flow interchange techniques and applications to variational Mean Field GamesLeast action principle and the incompressible Euler equations with variable densityContinuous dependence of the pressure field with respect to endpoints for ideal incompressible fluidsOn the regularity of the pressure field of relaxed solutions to Euler equations with variable densityOn the Existence of a Scalar Pressure Field in the Brödinger ProblemGeneralized compressible flows and solutions of the \(H(\text{div})\) geodesic problemDiscretization of Euler's equations using optimal transport: Cauchy and boundary value problemsNew estimates on the regularity of the pressure in density‐constrained mean field gamesFirst Order Mean Field Games with Density Constraints: Pressure Equals PriceGeodesics in the space of measure-preserving maps and plansMinimal Geodesics Along Volume-Preserving Maps, Through Semidiscrete Optimal TransportVarious formulations and approximations of incompressible fluid motions in porous media



Cites Work