Local estimates and stability of viscous flows in an exterior domain
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Publication:797393
DOI10.1007/BF00250859zbMath0544.76028MaRDI QIDQ797393
Salvatore Rionero, Giovanni Paolo Galdi
Publication date: 1983
Published in: Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
perturbationsboundary and initial datainequalities in weighted \(L^ p\)-spaces to estimate the perturbed velocity field and its gradientsno appeal to analyticitypointwise continuous dependence of solutionspointwise stability of solutions
Navier-Stokes equations for incompressible viscous fluids (76D05) Nonlinear effects in hydrodynamic stability (76E30) Navier-Stokes equations (35Q30) Dependence of solutions to PDEs on initial and/or boundary data and/or on parameters of PDEs (35B30)
Related Items
A uniqueness theorem for viscous fluid motions in exterior domains, Stability of solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations backward in time, Continuous dependence and stability for non linear dispersive and dissipative waves, Theorems of continuous dependence in elasticity for exterior domains, Stability of a steady flow of an incompressible Newtonian fluid in an exterior domain, Uniqueness and continuous dependence of solutions to the incompressible micropolar flows forward and backward in time, Existence and finite-dimensionality of attractors for a system of equations arising in ferromagnetism, The Lagrange identity method in linear thermoelasticity
Cites Work
- Variational methods for stability of fluid motions in unbounded domains
- The weight function approach to uniqueness of viscous flows in unbounded domains
- On the stability of incompressible viscous fluid motions past objects
- Uniqueness and continuous dependence theorem for the conduction-diffusion solution to the Boussinesq equations on an exterior domain
- On the spatial analyticity of solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations
- CONTINUOUS DEPENDENCE THEOREMS FOR NAVIER-STOKES EQUATIONS IN UNBOUNDED DOMAINS BY THE WEIGHT-FUNCTION METHOD
- Some Continuous Dependence Theorems for Viscous Fluid Motions