Navier-Stokes Equations
Navier-Stokes Equations
Navier-Stokes Equations
Grzegorzukaszewicz
PiotrKalita
Navier
Stokes
Equations
Series Editors:
David Y. Gao, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Tudor Ratiu, cole Polytechnique Fdrale
Advisory Board:
Ivar Ekeland, University of British Columbia
Tim Healey, Cornell University
Kumbakonam Rajagopal, Texas A&M University
David J. Steigmann, University of California, Berkeley
NavierStokes Equations
An Introduction with Applications
123
Grzegorz ukaszewicz
Faculty of Mathematics,
Informatics, and Mechanics
University of Warsaw
Warszawa, Poland
Piotr Kalita
Faculty of Mathematics and Computer
Science
Jagiellonian University in Krakow
Krakow, Poland
ISSN 1571-8689
ISSN 1876-9896 (electronic)
Advances in Mechanics and Mathematics
ISBN 978-3-319-27758-5
ISBN 978-3-319-27760-8 (eBook)
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-27760-8
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015960205
Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of
the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation,
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The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication
does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant
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errors or omissions that may have been made.
Printed on acid-free paper
This Springer imprint is published by Springer Nature
The registered company is Springer International Publishing AG Switzerland
Preface
vii
viii
Preface
The lectures at the Mathematics Faculty of the University of Warsaw were also
attended by students and PhD students from the Faculty of Physics and Faculty
of Geophysics, and it became clear that a routine mathematical lecture had to be
extended to include additional aspects of hydrodynamics. Some students asked for
more physics and motivation and more real applications; others were mainly
interested in the mathematics of the NavierStokes equations, and yet others would
like to see the NavierStokes equations in a more general context of evolution
equations and to learn the theory of infinite dimensional dynamical systems on the
research level. These several aspects of hydrodynamics well suited the tastes and
interests of the lecturer, and also the second author was welcomed to join the project
of the book at a later stage.
In consequence, the audience of the book is threesome:
Group I: Mathematicians, physicists, and engineers who want to learn about the
NavierStokes equations and mathematical modeling of fluids
Group II: University teachers who may teach a graduate or PhD course on fluid
mechanics basing on this book or higher-level students who start research on the
NavierStokes equations
Group III: Researchers interested in the exchange of current knowledge on
dynamical systems approach to the NavierStokes equations
Although, in principle, all these three groups can find interest in all chapters of
the book, Chaps. 27 are primarily targeted at Group I, Chaps. 3, 4, 7, 8, 11, and 12
aimed mainly at Group II, and Chaps. 716 for Group III.
For a reader with reasonable background on calculus, functional analysis, and
theory of weak solutions for PDEs, the whole book should be understandable.
The book was planned to be a monograph which could also be used as a textbook
to teach a course on fluid mechanics or the NavierStokes equations. Typical
courses could be NavierStokes equations, partial differential equations, fluid
mechanics, infinite dimensional dynamics systems. To this end many chapters
of this book include exercises. Moreover, we did not restrain ourselves to include
a number of figures to liven the text and make it more intuitive and less formal.
We believe that the figures will be helpful. Special care was undertaken to keep the
individual chapters self-contained as far as possible to allow the reader to read the
book linearly (in linear portions). That demanded several small repetitions here and
there.
To understand the first chapters of this book, just the basic knowledge on
calculus, that can be learned from any calculus textbook, should be enough.
The book is planned to be self-contained, but, to understand its last chapters,
some knowledge from a textbook like Partial Differential Equations by L.C. Evans
(which contains all necessary knowledge on functional analysis and PDEs) would
be helpful. Each chapter contains an introduction that explains in simple words the
nature of presented results and a section on bibliographical notes that will place it
in the context of past and current research.
Preface
ix
Grzegorz ukaszewicz
Piotr Kalita
Contents
11
11
20
22
23
24
26
28
31
36
Mathematical Preliminaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.1
Theorems from Functional Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2
Sobolev Spaces and Distributions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.3
Some Embedding Theorems and Inequalities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.4
Sobolev Spaces of Periodic Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.5
Evolution Spaces and Their Useful Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.6
Gronwall Type Inequalities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.7
Clarke Subdifferential and Its Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.8
Nemytskii Operator for Multifunctions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.9
Clarke Subdifferential: Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.10 Comments and Bibliographical Notes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
39
39
44
48
54
61
67
70
74
77
81
83
83
84
86
90
93
xi
xii
Contents
111
111
114
121
125
128
134
137
141
142
143
143
169
169
176
181
183
183
185
193
193
196
200
201
204
151
157
159
163
166
Contents
10
11
12
xiii
207
207
211
211
218
222
229
231
231
233
236
241
246
248
251
251
256
260
268
274
277
277
281
285
288
291
295
13
297
297
298
301
305
310
316
14
xiv
Contents
14.3
14.4
14.5
15
16
337
337
359
340
342
351
356
359
366
376
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 387
This chapter provides, for the convenience of the reader, an overview of the whole
book, first of its structure and then of the content of the individual chapters.
The outline of the book structure is as follows.
Chapter 2 shows the derivation of the NavierStokes equations from the principles of physics and discusses their physical and mathematical properties and
examples of the solutions for some particular cases, without going into complicated
mathematics. This part is aimed to fill in a gap between an engineer and mathematician and should be understood by anybody with basic knowledge of calculus
no more complicated than the Stokes theorem.
In Chap. 3, a necessary mathematical background including these parts of functional analysis and theory of Sobolev spaces which are needed to understand modern
research on the NavierStokes equations is presented. Chapters 46 comprise three
examples of stationary problems.
Then we smoothly move to the research level part of the book (Chaps. 716)
which presents the analysis from the point of view of global attractors of the
asymptotic (in time) behavior of the velocities being the solutions of the Navier
Stokes system. Roughly speaking we endeavor to show how the modern theory of
global attractors can be used to construct the mathematical objects that enclose the
seemingly chaotic and unordered eddy and turbulent flows. We tame these flows
by showing their fine properties like the finite dimensionality of global attractors,
which means that the description of unrestful and turbulent states can be done by
finite number of parameters or existence of invariant measures which means that the
flow becomes, in statistical sense, stationary.
We deal with non-autonomous problems using the recent and elegant theory of
so-called pullback attractors that allows to cope with flows with changing in time
sources, sinks, or boundary data. We also solve problems with multivalued boundary
conditions that allow to model various contact conditions between the fluid and
enclosing object, such as the stick/slip frictional boundary behavior.
in Q;
divu D 0 in Q;
with one of the boundary conditions:
1. Q D 0; L3 in R3 and we assume periodic boundary conditions, or
2. Q is a bounded domain in R3 , with smooth boundary, and we assume the
homogeneous boundary condition u D 0 on @Q.
This basic problem serves as an introduction to the mathematical theory of
the NavierStokes equations. We introduce the suitable function spaces in which
we (usually) seek solutions of the stationary problem, then we present the weak
formulation. It allows us to use the theories of linear and nonlinear functional
analysis (LaxMilgram lemma and fixed point theorems, respectively) to prove the
existence of solutions.
To show typical methods used when dealing with nonlinear problems, we present
a number of proofs based on various linearizations and fixed point theorems in
standard function spaces. The solutions, due to the nonlinearity of the NavierStokes
equations are not in general unique, however, under some restriction on the mass
force and viscosity coefficient (quite intuitive from the physical point of view), one
can prove their uniqueness.
In Chap. 5 we consider the stationary NavierStokes equations with friction in
the three-dimensional bounded domain . The domain boundary @ is divided
into two parts, namely the boundary D on which we assume the homogeneous
Dirichlet boundary condition and the contact boundary C on which we decompose
the velocity into the normal and tangent directions. In the normal direction we
assume u n D 0, i.e., there is no leak through the boundary, while in the tangent
direction we set T 2 h.x; u /, the multivalued relation between the tangent
stress and tangent velocity. This relation is the general form of the friction law on
the contact boundary. The existence of solution is shown by the KakutaniFan
Glicksberg fixed point theorem and some cut-off techniques.
In Chap. 6 we consider a typical problem for the hydrodynamic equations coming
from the lubrication theory. In this theory the domain of the flow is usually very thin
and the engineers are interested in the distribution of the pressure therein. Because
of the thinness of the domain, in practice one assumes that the pressure would
depend only on two and not three independent variables. The pressure distribution
is governed then by the Reynolds equation, which depends on the original boundary
data. Our aim is to obtain the Reynolds equation starting from the stationary Stokes
equations, considered in the three-dimensional domains " , " > 0,
u C rp D f
div u D 0
in
";
in " ;
with a Fourier boundary condition on the top F" and Tresca boundary conditions
on the bottom part of the boundary C , respectively. We show how to pass, in a
precise mathematical way, as " ! 0, from the three-dimensional Stokes equations
to a two-dimensional Reynolds equation for the pressure distribution (see Fig. 1.1).
The passage from the three-dimensional problem to a two-dimensional one
depends on several factors and additional scaling assumptions. The existence of
solutions of the limit equations follows from the existence of solutions of the
original three-dimensional problem. Finally, we show the uniqueness of the limit
solution.
In Chaps. 710 we consider the nonstationary autonomous NavierStokes
equations
ut u C .u r/u C rp D f ;
(1.1)
div u D 0;
(1.2)
in two-dimensional domains. In these chapters the solutions are global in time and
unique.
Fig. 1.1 Schematic view of the problem considered in Chap. 6. Incompressible static Stokes
equation is solved on the three-dimensional domain " . The domain thickness is given by "h,
where h is a function of the point in the two-dimensional domain !. As " ! 0, Reynolds equation
on ! is recovered
U 2 R;
U>0
on
C ;
Fig. 1.3 Three-dimensional infinite ring-like domain and its rectification considered in Chaps. 9
and 10
on C ;
and that the tangential component of the velocity u on C is unknown and satisfies
the Tresca friction law with a constant and positive maximal friction coefficient k.
This means that
9
>
>
>
>
>
=
>
>
>
>
>
;
on
C ;
(1.3)
where T is the tangential component of the stress tensor on C and U0 e1 D .U0 ; 0/,
U0 2 R, is the velocity of the lower surface producing the driving force of the flow.
In the second problem the boundary C is also assumed to be moving with
the constant velocity U0 e1 D .U0 ; 0/ which, together with the mass force, produces
the driving force of the flow. The friction coefficient k is assumed to be related to
the slip rate through the relation k D k.ju U0 j/, where k W RC ! RC . If there
is no slip between the fluid and the boundary then the friction is bounded by the
threshold k.0/
u D U0 ) jT j k.0/
on
C ;
(1.4)
while if there is a slip, then the friction force density (equal to tangential stress) is
given by the expression
u U0 ) T D k.ju U0 j/
u U0
ju U0 j
on
C :
(1.5)
Note that (1.4) and (1.5) generalize the Tresca law (1.3) where k was assumed to
be a constant. Here k depends of the slip rate, this dependence represents the fact
that the kinetic friction is less than the static one, which holds if k is a decreasing
function.
We prove that for both problems above there exist exponential attractors, in
particular the global attractors of finite fractal dimension.
In Chaps. 1113 we consider the time asymptotics of solutions of the two-dimensional NavierStokes equations. First, in Chap. 11 we prove two properties of the
equations in a bounded domain, concerning the existence of determining modes and
nodes. Then we study the equations in an unbounded domain, in the framework of
the theory of infinite dimensional non-autonomous dynamical systems, introducing
the notion of the pullback attractor.
Chapter 12 presents a construction of invariant measures and statistical solutions
for the non-autonomous NavierStokes equations in bounded and some unbounded
domains in R2 . More precisely, we construct the family of probability measures
f t gt2R and prove the relations t .E/ D .U.t; /1 E/ for t; 2 R, t and
Borel sets E in H. The support of each measure t is included in the section A.t/
of the pullback attractor. We prove also the Liouville and energy equations. Finally,
we consider statistical solutions of the NavierStokes equations supported on the
pullback attractor.
U.t/ 2 R on
C :
Our aim is to study the time asymptotics of solutions in the frame of the dynamical
systems theory. We prove the existence of the pullback attractor and estimate its
fractal dimension. We shall apply the results from Chap. 11, reformulated here in
the language of evolutionary processes.
Chapters 1416 are devoted to global in time solutions of the NavierStokes
equations which are not necessary unique. We introduce theories of global attractors
for multivalued semiflows and multivalued processes to include this situation.
We study further examples of contact problems in both autonomous and nonautonomous cases.
In Chap. 14 we consider two-dimensional nonstationary NavierStokes shear
flows in the domain as in Fig. 1.2, with nonmonotone and multivalued boundary
conditions on C . Namely, we assume the following subdifferential boundary
condition
pQ .x; t/ 2 @j.un .x; t//
on
C ;
on
C ;
on
C :
or
xi D xi .X; t/ :
(2.1)
If X is fixed and t varies, Eq. (2.1) specifies the path of the particle initially at X.
On the other hand, for fixed t, (2.1) determines a transformation of a region initially
occupied by the fluid into its position at time t.
11
12
We assume that the transformation (2.1) is continuous and invertible, that is, there
exists its inverse
X D X.x; t/;
.or
Xi D Xi .x; t// :
(2.2)
(2.3)
d
x.X; t/ ;
dt
.x D x.X; t// :
(2.4)
Above, X is treated as a parameter representing a given fixed particle, and this is the
reason that we use the ordinary derivative in (2.4).
Having the velocity field u.x; t/, we can (in principle) determine the transformation (2.1), solving the ordinary differential equation
d
x.X; t/ D u.x.X; t/; t/;
dt
with x.X; 0/ D X, where X is a parameter.
We shall always write
d
F.X; t/
dt
and
@
f .x; t/ ;
@t
13
D
f .x; t/
Dt
@f
.x; t/
@t
(2.5)
Transport Theorem Let .t/ denote an arbitrary volume that is moving with the
fluid and let f .x; t/ be a scalar or vector function of position and time. The transport
theorem states that
Z
d
f .x; t/ dx
(2.6)
dt .t/
Z
D
.t/
@f
.x; t/ C u.x; t/ rf .x; t/ C f .x; t/ div u.x; t/ dx :
@t
x D x.X; t/ ;
as in (2.1). Then
Z
.t/
f .x; t/ dx
Z
D
.0/
Z
f .x.X; t/; t/J.X; t/ dX D
.0/
F.X; t/J.X; t/ dX ;
so that
d
dt
Z
.t/
f .x; t/dx D
d
dt
Z
F.X; t/J.X; t/ dX
.0/
Z
D
.0/
d
d
F.X; t/J.X; t/ C F.X; t/ J.X; t/ dX :
dt
dt
(2.7)
14
By (2.5) we have
Z
d
F.X; t/J.X; t/ dX
dt
.0/
@f
.x.X; t/; t/ C u.x.X; t/; t/ rf .x.X; t/; t/ J.X; t/ dX
@t
@f
.x; t/ C u.x; t/ rf .x; t/ dx :
@t
D
.0/
Z
D
.t/
(2.8)
Z
dx D
.t/
.0/
d
J.X; t/dX ;
dt
hence by (2.8), (2.2), and the arbitrariness of choice of the domain .t/ via .0/ a
necessary and sufficient condition for the fluid to be incompressible is
div u.x; t/ D 0 :
Exercise 2.1. Prove that the transport theorem can be written in the form
d
dt
Z
.t/
f .x; t/ dx D
.t/
@f
.x; t/ dx C
@t
Z
@.t/
.x; t/ dx :
15
The principle of conservation of mass says that the mass of a fluid in a material
volume does not change as moves with the fluid; that is,
d
dt
Z
.t/
.x; t/ dx D 0 :
Z
.t/
@
C div .u/ dx D 0 ;
@t
whence
@
C div .u/ D 0 :
@t
(2.9)
Z
.t/
f dx D
.t/
D
f dx :
Dt
(2.11)
t
0
div u.x; t/ dt :
16
xi
1 C ai t
.a1 D 2 ; a2 D 1 ; a3 D 0/;
tn dS :
The Cauchy principle says that tn depends at any given time only on the position
and the orientation of the surface element dS; in other words,
tn D tn .x; t; n/ :
The principle of conservation of linear momentum says that the rate of change of
linear momentum of a material volume equals the resultant force on the volume
d
dt
Z
.t/
udx D
Z
.t/
f dx C
@.t/
tn dS ;
(2.12)
tn dS :
(2.13)
Du
dx D
Dt
Z
.t/
f dx C
@.t/
From this equation we derive a very important fact, namely, that the vector tn (called
normal stress) can be expressed as a linear function of n, in the form
tn .x; t; n/ D n.x; t/T.x; t/ ;
(2.14)
17
where T D fTij g is a matrix called the stress tensor. This will allow us to pass from
the integral form (2.13) of the equation of conservation of linear momentum to a
differential one.
Let l3 be the volume of D .t/. Dividing both sides of (2.13) by l2 and letting
the volume tend to zero we obtain
Z
2
lim l
tn dS D 0 ;
(2.15)
jj!0
(2.16)
where t.n/ D tn D tn .x; t; n/, t.h/ D th for h 2 fe1 ; e2 ; e3 g, and ni > 0. By
a continuity argument, (2.16) holds for all ni 0, and then we prove easily that
t.ei / D t.ei /, i D 1; 2; 3, and that it holds for all n. This means that t.n/ may be
expressed as a linear function of n; that is, we can write it in the form (2.14). Thus,
by (2.13) and by the Green theorem we obtain
Z
.t/
Du
dx D
Dt
Z
.t/
.f C div T/ dx ;
Du
D f C div T ;
Dt
(2.17)
or
0
1
3
X
@
@
@ ui C
uj ui A D fi C Tji;j ;
@t
@xj
jD1
i D 1; 2; 3 :
18
In the simplest model the contact forces act perpendicularly to the surface
elements. We have then
t.n/ D p.x/n ;
and call p the pressure. The minus sign is chosen so that when p > 0, the contact
forces on a closed surface tend to compress the fluid inside; p represents the pressure
exerted from outside on a surface of the element of the fluid.
In particular, all fluids at rest exhibit this stress behavior, namely that an element
of area always experiences a stress normal to itself, and this stress is independent of
the orientation. Such stress is called hydrostatic.
We call this idealized model a perfect fluid. The equation of motion for perfect
fluids is
@u
C .u r/u D f rp ;
@t
where
.u r/ui D
3
X
jD1
uj
@
ui ;
@xj
i D 1; 2; 3 :
All real fluids when in motion can exert tangential stresses across surface elements,
in which case the tensor T is not diagonal.
The stress tensor may always be written in the form
Tij D pij C Pij :
In this case Pij is called the viscous stress tensor.
In classical fluid dynamics it is assumed that the stress tensor is symmetric, that is,
Tij D Tji :
This assumption has very important consequences. It may be also considered as a
theorem if we assume a specific form of the equation of conservation of angular
momentum. We shall discuss this in Sect. 2.2.
Exercise 2.8 (Cf. [5]). Show that the Cauchy equation of motion can be written as
@
.ui / D fi C .Tji uj ui /;j ;
@t
and interpret it physically.
19
Exercise 2.9 (Cf. [5]). Show that if F is any function of position and time, then
Z
Z
Dui
fi
Tji F ;j CF
dx
FTji nj dS D
Dt
@
1 2
juj C E
2
.t/
dx
(2.18)
Z
D
.t/
f u dx C
@.t/
Z
tn u dS
@.t/
q n dS :
The first integral on the right-hand side is the rate at which the body force does work,
the second integral represents the work done by the stress, and the third integral
is the total heat flux into the volume.
We shall write this equation in another form. From the theorem of stress means
(Exercise 2.9) we have, with F D ui ,
Z
Z
Dui
fi ui dx :
Tji ui;j C ui
ui Tji nj dS D
Dt
@.t/
.t/
Rearranging the terms and using the transport theorem, we obtain
d
dt
1
juj2 dx D
2
.t/
Z
.t/
1D 2
juj dx
2 Dt
(2.19)
Z
D
.t/
fi ui dx
.t/
Z
Tji ui;j dx C
@.t/
ui .tn /i dS :
Thus the rate of change of kinetic energy of a material volume is the sum of three
parts: the rate at which the body forces do work, the rate at which the internal
stresses do work, and the rate at which the surface stresses do work.
From (2.18), (2.19), the transport theorem, and the Green theorem we obtain
Z
.t/
DE
C r q T W .ru/ dx D 0 ;
Dt
where T W .ru/ is the dyadic notation for Tji ui;j , the scalar product of T and ru.
20
Thus
DE
D r q C T W .ru/ :
Dt
Conservation Laws of Classical Hydrodynamics Above we obtained the following system of conservation laws of classical hydrodynamics
D
D r u ;
Dt
Du
D r T C f ;
Dt
DE
D r q C T W .ru/ :
Dt
(2.20)
(2.21)
(2.22)
.k 0/ ;
(2.23)
where k is the thermal conductivity of the fluid then the energy equation takes the
form
DE
D r .kr
/ C T W .ru/ :
Dt
(2.24)
1
.ui;j C uj;i /;
2
(2.25)
(2.26)
21
(b) The fluid is homogeneous; that is, T does not depend explicitly on x.
(c) The fluid is isotropic; that is, there is no preferred direction.
(d) When there is no deformation (D D 0), and the fluid is incompressible
(uk;k D 0), the stress is hydrostatic (T D pI, I is the unit matrix).
Fluids that satisfy these postulates are called Stokesian. It can be proved (cf. [5, 212])
that the most general form of the stress tensor in this case is
T D .p C /I C D C D2 ;
where p; ; ; are some functions that depend on the thermodynamic state, ; ;
being dependent as well on the invariants of the tensor D.
Moreover, when the dependence of the components of T on the components of
D is postulated to be linear, the stress tensor can be written as
T D .p C div u/I C 2 D ;
which coincides with (2.24). Such linear Stokesian fluids are called Newtonian.
Fluids that are not Newtonian are called non-Newtonian. One important example
of the latter are the micropolar fluids [92, 159].
The Stress Tensor and the Law of Conservation of Angular Momentum
Looking at the form of the equation of conservation of linear momentum
d
dt
Z
.t/
u dx D
.t/
f dx C
@.t/
tn dS ;
Z
.t/
.x u/ dx D
Z
.t/
.x f / dx C
@.t/
x tn dS :
(2.27)
22
Remark 2.2. In classical hydrodynamics the stress tensor is symmetric, and the law
of conservation of angular momentum is defined by Eq. (2.27). In consequence,
in classical hydrodynamics the law of conservation of angular momentum can be
derived from the law of conservation of mass and the law of conservation of linear
momentum, and as such adds nothing to the description of the fluid.
Proof. Let us assume (ii), and we shall deduce (i). Applying formula (2.11), we
have from (2.27)
Z
d
.x u/ dx
(2.28)
dt .t/
Z
D
.t/
D
.x u/ dx D
Dt
D
.t/
.x f / dx C
Du
dx
x
Dt
.t/
@.t/
x tn dS :
Z
x tn dS D
.t/
.x .r T/ C Tx / dx ;
(2.29)
where r T is another notation for div T, and Tx is the vector ijk Tjk (ijk is the
alternating tensor of Levi-Civita), so that by (2.28)
Z
Z
Du
f r T dx D
x
Tx dx :
Dt
.t/
.t/
The left-hand side vanishes identically by the Cauchy equation; hence the right-hand
side vanishes for an arbitrary volume, and so Tx D 0. However, the components of
Tx are T23 T32 , T31 T13 , T12 T21 , and the vanishing of these implies Tij D Tji ,
so that T is symmetric.
We leave to the reader the proof that (i) implies (ii).
t
u
(2.30)
(2.31)
23
DE
D p div u C r q ;
Dt
(2.32)
where
D .div u/2 C 2 D W D
(2.33)
(2.34)
that the specific internal energy of the fluid is proportional to its temperature,
E D cr
;
where
cr D const > 0 ;
(2.35)
and that Fouriers law (2.23) (with k D const 0) holds. With (2.34), (2.35), (2.23),
and (2.33), system (2.30)(2.32) becomes
@
C u r D 0 ; div u D 0 ;
@t
@u
C .u r/u D rp C u C f ;
@t
@
cr
C u r
D 2 D W D C k
:
@t
(2.36)
(2.37)
(2.38)
div u D 0 ;
@
C u r
D 2D W D C
:
@t
k
(
(2.39)
(2.40)
(2.41)
24
When the body forces f do not depend on temperature, the first two equations of the
above system,
@u
1
C .u r/u D rp C u C f ;
@t
div u D 0
(2.42)
(2.43)
constitute a closed system of equations with respect to variables u; p, and are called
NavierStokes equations of viscous incompressible fluids with uniform density (we
shall call them just the NavierStokes equations). The mechanical energy of the flow
governed by (2.42) and (2.43) due to viscous dissipation is lost and appears as heat.
This can be seen from Eq. (2.41) in which the term 2D W D is positive, provided
the flow is not uniform. In real fluids, however, density depends on temperature,
so that our system (2.39)(2.41) may be physically impossible. In fact, due to
viscosity and high velocity gradients the temperature rises in view of (2.41), and this
produces density fluctuations, contrary to our assumption that density is uniform in
the flow domain. Thus, reduced problems often play the role of more or less justified
approximations. For more considerations of this kind cf. [109, Chap. 1].
When the body forces depend on temperature, f D f .
/, we have to take into
account the whole system (2.39)(2.41). One of the considered in the literature
system of equations of heat conducting viscous and incompressible fluid are the
so-called Boussinesq equations,
@u
1
1
C .u r/u D rp C u C g.
0 / ;
@t
0
0
div u D 0 ;
@
C u r
D
;
@t
cr
(2.44)
(2.45)
(2.46)
25
we obtain
@!
C .u r/! D .! r/u C !;
@t
(2.47)
where the vector field ! D r u is called vorticity of the fluid. It has a simple
physical interpretation. In the case of two-dimensional motion with
u D .u1 .x; y/; u2 .x; y/; 0/;
the vorticity reduces to
@u2 .x1 ; x2 / @u1 .x1 ; x2 /
;
! D .0; 0; !3 .x1 ; x2 // D 0; 0;
@x1
@x2
where the third component represents twice the angular velocity of a small
(infinitesimal) fluid element at point .x1 ; x2 /. The vorticity field is, by definition,
divergence free,
div ! D 0:
In the case of two-dimensional motions the Eq. (2.47) reduces to
@!
C .u r/! D !;
@t
and we can see that the vorticity in the fluid is transported by two agents: convection
and diffusion, just as the temperature in the system (2.44)(2.46).
For inviscid fluids ( D 0) the vorticity field has very important properties that
allow us to imagine behavior of complicated turbulent flows [83]. In this case,
vorticity is a local variable which means that we can isolate a patch of vorticity and
observe how it is transported along the velocity field trajectories with a finite speed.
For two-dimensional flows this is evident as then the vorticity equation reduces to
@!
C .u r/! D 0:
@t
For more information, cf. [166].
Exercise 2.10. Vorticity has nothing in common with rotation of the fluid as a
whole. Calculate the vorticity of the flows: (a) u.x1 ; x2 ; x3 / D .u1 .x2 /; 0; 0/ and
(b) u.r; ; z/ D .0; k=r; 0/ for r > 0.
26
2.6 Thermodynamics
Equations of State From the point of view of thermodynamics the state of a
homogeneous fluid can be described by some definite relations among a number
of certain state variables, the most important being the volume V .V D 1=/, the
entropy S, the internal energy E, the pressure p, and the absolute temperature
,
cf. [212].
In such a description one may start with a relation of the form (cf. [212])
E D E.S; V/
(Gibbs relation)
(2.48)
@E
;
@V
@E
;
@S
(2.49)
with p;
> 0 by assumption. In this case, taking the total differential in (2.48) and
using (2.49), we obtain
dE D
dS p dV
or
dE D
dS p
1
d :
2
(2.50)
A simple phase system is said to undergo a differentiable process if its state variables
are differentiable functions of time: V D V.t/, S D S.t/, etc. Assuming such a
dependence one usually assumes, together with (2.50), that
DS
DV
DE
D
p
Dt
Dt
Dt
or
DE
DS
1 D
D
p 2
:
Dt
Dt
Dt
(2.51)
Relation (2.51) makes it possible to write a definite form of the balance of entropy
when we know the laws of conservation of mass and internal energy. We shall use
this relation in the sequel.
Second Law of Thermodynamics and Constraints on Viscosity Coefficients
Consider the law of conservation of energy (2.32)
DE
D r .kr
/ p div u C ;
Dt
(2.52)
where Fouriers law is assumed, and is given by (2.33). We see that the internal
energy increases with the influx of heat transfer, compression, and the viscous
dissipation.
2.6 Thermodynamics
27
1 D
:
Dt
(2.53)
DE p D
D r .kr
/ C :
Dt
Dt
(2.54)
Now we shall transform the left-hand side of (2.54). From (2.51) we have
DS
DE
p D
D
C
:
Dt
Dt
Dt
(2.55)
DS
1
1
D r .kr
/ C ;
Dt
(2.56)
Thus
so that
Z
.t/
d
DS
dx D
Dt
dt
Z
.t/
Z
D
.t/
S dx
(2.57)
1
1
r .kr
/ C
dx
k
k
1
2
r
C 2 jr
j C dx :
r
D
.t/
Z
In the end we obtain the following integral form of the balance of entropy
Z
.t/
DS
dx D
Dt
Z
@.t/
k @
dS C
@n
Z
.t/
k
1
2
dx:
jr
j
C
(2.58)
28
Z
@.t/
k @
dS D
@n
Z
@.t/
q n
dS ;
(2.59)
where is given by (2.33). The inequality (2.59) gives us the restrictions on the
coefficients in the constitutive equation (2.24). Without assuming the Fourier law,
the second law of thermodynamics states that
1
q r
C 0 :
3 C 2 0;
0:
Hint. The left-hand side of inequality (2.59) must be nonnegative for an arbitrary
choice of
;i and Dij . It is clear that this implies k 0. The nonnegativity of the
terms containing Dij is equivalent to the condition
3 C 2 0 and
0:
Du
D rp C u;
Dt
div u D 0
(2.60)
29
in D 0; Ln , u D u.x; t/, p D p.x; t/, with initial condition u.x; 0/ D u0 .x/, and
0
Du0
D rp0 C 0 u0 ;
Dt0
div u0 D 0
(2.61)
u.x; t/
;
U
p? .x? ; t? / D
p.x; t/ p0
U 2
(2.62)
and
x? D
x
;
L
t? D
U
t;
L
(2.63)
div u? D 0
(2.64)
LU
:
In the case of problem (2.60) the symbols ; L; U; denote dimensional characteristic quantities of the flow, describing the density of the fluid (), characteristic
linear dimension of the domain of the flow (L), some characteristic velocity (U),
and viscosity ( ). For U we can take, for example, the square root of the average
initial kinetic energy in , see [88] for more details. According to (2.62) and (2.63),
in (2.64) all dependent and independent variables are nondimensional, together with
the Reynolds number Re. The characteristic quantities of the flow in (2.64) are equal
to one, with the exception of viscosity which equals 1=Re.
In the same way we can reduce system (2.61) to system (2.64), now with the
Reynolds number
Re0 D
0 L0 U 0
:
0
Assume now that Re D Re0 . Then both systems (2.60) and (2.61) (including the
boundary conditions) are represented, in nondimensional variables, by the same
system (2.64). We call systems (2.60) and (2.61) dynamically similar. Solving
system (2.64) we generate solutions to an infinite three-parameter family of systems
having the same Reynolds number.
30
x U
; t ;
L L
p.x; t/ D U 2 p?
x U
; t C p0
L L
Du0
D rp0 C u0 ;
Dt
div u0 D 0
(2.65)
where l > 0, also solve this system of equations. Thus having one (nontrivial)
solution of system (2.65) we can generate in principle an infinite number of different
solutions of the same system.
Consider the transformations,
1 1
(2.66)
.x; t; u; p/ ! lx; l2 t; u; 2 p ; l > 0;
l l
31
or
x0 D lx ;
t 0 D l2 t ;
1
u;
l
1
p0 D 2 p:
l
u0 D
Show that transformations (2.66) form a group. This group is called a one parameter
symmetry group of scalings of system (2.65).
A solution .u0 ; p0 / is called self-similar if u.x; t/ D u0 .x0 ; t0 /; p.x; t/ D p0 .x0 ; t0 /,
cf. [17].
Exercise 2.15. Let u0 ; p0 solve the system of equations
0
Du0
D rp0 C u0 ;
Dt
div u0 D 0
32
Due to the geometrical symmetry of the problem and under additional intuitively
apparent preconceptions, we assume that the flow is of the form u D .u.y; t/; 0; 0/.
Substituting u of the above form into the NavierStokes equations (2.42) we obtain
@u
1 @p
@2 u
D
C 2 ;
@t
@x
@y
(2.67)
@p
@p
D
D 0:
@y
@z
(2.68)
(2.69)
with
u.y; 0/ D 0
for
y > 0;
(2.70)
u.0; t/ D U
for
t > 0;
(2.71)
u.1; t/ D 0
for
t > 0:
(2.72)
We say that a solution u D u.y; t/ of the initial and boundary value problem (2.69)
(2.72) is invariant or self-similar with respect to the one-parameter symmetry group
of scalings
y0 D y;
t0 D 2 t;
u0 D u;
> 0;
(2.73)
y0 > 0 ;
for t0 > 0 ;
u.1; t0 / D 0 for
t0 > 0:
Observe that the transformation of the independent variables does not change the
space-time domain.
33
The relation u0 .y0 ; t0 / D u.y; t/ satisfied by the invariant solution implies that
the number of its independent variables can be reduced by one [17]. Together with
the dimensional homogeneity principle [33] stating that physical phenomena must
be described by laws that do not depend on the unit of measure applied to the
dimensions of the variables that describe the phenomena, we arrive at the following
form of the solution
y
D p :
t
u.y; t/ D f ./;
(2.74)
Notice that the new variable , called similarity variable is nondimensional and is
invariant with respect to the symmetry group of scalings y0 D y, t0 D 2 t.
Exercise 2.16. Assume that problem (2.69)(2.72) is invariant with respect to a
dilation group
y0 D ea y;
t0 D eb t;
u0 D ec u;
for some a; b; c, that is if u.x; t/ is a solution of the problem then u0 .x0 ; t0 / is also a
solution of the same problem. Then we get (2.73).
Observe, that if a problem is uniquely solvable and invariant with respect to a
symmetry group of scalings x ! x0 ; t ! t0 ; u ! u0 then its unique solution is
also invariant.
Substituting function of the form (2.74) to problem (2.69)(2.72) we obtain
1
f 00 C f 0 D 0;
2
with
f .0/ D U;
f .1/ D 0:
s2
4
ds:
The example of the velocity profile given by (2.75) is depicted in Fig. 2.1.
(2.75)
34
h=
y 3,5
vt
3
2,5
2
1,5
1
0,5
0
0
u(h)
0,1
0,2
0,3
0,4
0,5
0,6
0,7
0,8
0,9
Fig. 2.1 Velocity profile for the flow in the half-space due to the impulsively moved boundary. In
the plot we have U D 1. The variable on the horizontal axis is the velocity u, and on the vertical
y
axis D pt
Exercise 2.17. Check that the pair .u; p/ D .u..y; t/; 0; 0/; C/ where C is a
constant and u is the function given in (2.75) is a solution of the NavierStokes
equations (2.42) and (2.43) with initial and boundary conditions (2.70)(2.72).
Observe that we have found only one of, perhaps, many other solutions of the
problem. We cannot claim that the solution is unique in u.
From (2.75) it follows that the velocity of the flow is a nonlocal variable, that is,
it spreads information through the region of the flow with infinite speed. Although
at negative times the flow was at rest, at any, however small, positive time t and
any, however large, y > 0, we have u.y; t/ > 0. The same observation concerns the
vorticity vector (the third and only nonzero component of which is ! D @u
) as
@y
both functions u and ! satisfy the diffusion equation.
The Poiseuille Flow Consider a stationary flow u D .u.y/; 0; 0/ in the domain
f.x; y; z/ 2 R3 W 0 < y < hg;
and with homogeneous boundary conditions u D 0 at y D 0 and y D h. Substituting
u of the above form to the NavierStokes equations we obtain the equations of
motion
1 @p
@2 u
;
D
2
@y
@x
@p
@p
D
D 0;
@y
@z
@2 u
1 @p
DC
D
2
@y
@x
(2.76)
35
0,014
0,012
0,01
u(y)
0,008
0,006
0,004
0,002
0
0
0,1
0,2
0,3
0,4
0,5
0,6
0,7
0,8
0,9
h=1
Fig. 2.2 Parabolic velocity profile for the Poiseuille flow. The constants were chosen as h D 1,
D 10, and C D 1. Velocity u.y/ is on the vertical axis, and the space variable y is on the
horizontal axis
for some constant C. Taking into account the boundary conditions we obtain
u.y/ D
C
y.y h/ ;
2
where
CD
1 @p
:
@x
From the last equation we have p.x/ D Cx C B, for an arbitrary constant B. Let
us take B D 0. We can see that there is an infinite number of solutions .u; p/ of the
form
u.y/ D
C
y.y h/;
2
p.x/ D Cx:
(2.77)
We call them the Poiseuille flows. For C D 0 the flow is just at rest, both velocity and
pressure equal zero. For C < 0 the fluid flows towards the increasing x-direction,
u > 0, driven by the force due to the pressure gradient (as C < 0 the pressure
decreases with increasing x). The example of the velocity profile given by (2.77) for
negative value of C is depicted in Fig. 2.2.
36
U
2
1,8
1,6
1,4
1,2
u(y)
1
0,8
0,6
0,4
0,2
0
0,1
0,2
0,3
0,4
0,5
0,6
0,7
0,8
0,9
y1
h=1
Fig. 2.3 Linear velocity profile for the Couette flow. The constants were chosen as h D 1 and
C D 2. Velocity u.y/ is on the vertical axis, and the space variable y is on the horizontal axis
The Couette Flow Let us consider a flow u D .u.y/; 0; 0/ in the same region as
in the preceding example, this time, however, with different boundary conditions.
We pose u D 0 at y D 0 and u D U at y D h. As the driving force now comes
from the motion of the upper boundary y D h, we pose C D 0 which corresponds
to p D const in the whole domain. Solving Eq. (2.76) in u with C D 0 and with the
new boundary conditions we obtain the solution
u.y/ D
U
y;
h
p D const:
(2.78)
of the problem, with a uniform pressure distribution. We call this flow the Couette
flow. The velocity profile given by (2.78) for negative value of C is depicted in
Fig. 2.3.
37
As was observed by Birkhoff in [16], until it has been shown that the boundary
value problem is well-set, one cannot conclude that its equations are erroneous.
The latter means false according to the following definition, cf. [16]: A theory
of rational hydrodynamics will be called incomplete if its conditions do not
uniquely determine the flow, overdetermined if its conditions are mathematically
incompatible, false if it is well-set but gives grossly incorrect predictions.
Since from a particular theory in its whole generality, it is in most cases quite
impossible to predict qualitative properties of the flow (it is sometimes easier,
however, to compare various flows among themselves), we are forced to simplify,
whatever that means. In this connection, there are very often exact solutions of
special problems that serve to test whether a given theory gives correct predictions
and consequently is not a false theory.
We enumerate a number of such simplifications (which we have already used in
Sect. 2.8):
1. linearization of governing equations,
2. setting a special form of boundary conditions,
3. assumption of some symmetry in space (which reduces the number of spatial
dimensions),
4. assumption that the problem is time-independent,
5. assumption that acting forces are potential or absent.
After suitable simplifications have been done, the original problem reduces to
the one that can be (luckily) solved explicitly by solving, e.g., a linear system
of ordinary differential equations with constant coefficients. Having the exact
solutions, we try to compare them with experiments.
When simplifying, however, one has to be very careful in order not to oversimplify and obtain paradoxes, for example. It is well known (cf. [16]) that
the various plausible intuitive assumptions we make implicitly when simplifying
may be fallacious. Following [16], we state the assumptions that are especially
suggestive:
1. intuition suffices for determining which physical variables require consideration,
2. small causes produce small effects, and infinitesimal causes produce infinitesimal
effects,
3. symmetric causes produce effects with the same symmetry,
4. the flow topology can be guessed by intuition,
5. the processes of analysis can be used freely: the functions of rational hydrodynamics can be freely integrated, differentiated, expanded in series, integrals, etc.,
6. mathematical problems suggested by intuitive physical ideas are well-set.
In Chaps. 1416 we consider problems whose solutions might not be unique.
For more information about classical hydrodynamics we refer the reader to
[1, 14, 83, 149].
For a history of hydrodynamics and the derivation and development of the
NavierStokes equations, in particular, see [81].
Mathematical Preliminaries
In this chapter we introduce the basic preliminary mathematical tools to study the
NavierStokes equations, including results from linear and nonlinear functional
analysis as well as the theory of function spaces. We present, in particular, some
of the most frequently used in the sequel embedding theorems and differential
inequalities.
t
u
!1
39
40
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Theorem 3.2 (LaxMilgram Lemma for Separable Spaces). Let H be a separable Hilbert space with a norm kk, L 2 H 0 a linear functional on H, a.u; v/ a bilinear
and continuous form on H H, coercive, that is, such that for some > 0 and for
all u 2 H
a.u; u/ kuk2 :
Then there exists a unique element u 2 H such that
a.u; v/ D L.v/
for all
v 2 H:
(3.1)
Proof. We use the Galerkin method, to which we shall refer in the following
chapters. It consists of proving the existence of elements um 2 Hm such that
a.um ; v/ D L.v/
for all
v 2 Hm ;
(3.2)
where HS
m are finite dimensional subspaces of H such that H1 H2 Hm
and 1
mD1 Hn is a dense subset of H, and then by passing to the limit with n to
obtain (3.1).
Let !1 , !2 , !3 , : : : be a basis of H and Hm D spanf!1 ; : : : ; !m g, m D
1; 2; 3; : : : .
1. We shall show that for each positive integer m there exists um 2 Hm such that (3.2)
holds. Let
um D
m
X
k !k :
kD1
k a.!k ; !l / D L.!l / ;
l D 1; 2; : : : ; m :
kD1
This system has a unique solution .1 ; : : : ; m / for every right-hand side if
and only if the matrix fa.!k ; !l /gk;lm is nonsingular. We shall show that the
homogeneous system
m
X
k a.!k ; !l / D 0 ;
l D 1; 2; : : : ; m ;
kD1
has a unique solution D .0; 0; : : : ; 0/. We multiply the lth equation by k and
add the equations to get
m X
m
X
lD1 kD1
l k a.!k ; !l / D a
m
X
kD1
k !k ;
m
X
lD1
!
l !l
D a.um ; um / D 0 :
41
1
kLkH 0
for each positive integer m. From Theorem 3.1 it follows that there exists a subsequence fu g of the sequence of approximate solutions fum g and an element
u 2 H such that u !u weakly in H. For j we have
a.u ; v/ D L.v/
for all
v 2 Hj H ;
so that
lim a.u ; v/ D a.u; v/ D L.v/
!1
for
v2
1
[
Hj :
jD1
S
As 1
jD1 Hj is a dense subset of H, we conclude from the continuity of a.; / and
L./ that (3.1) holds for every v 2 H.
3. Uniqueness of u. Let us suppose that we have two different elements u1 and
u2 such that a.u1 ; v/ D L.v/ and a.u2 ; v/ D L.v/ for all v 2 H. Thus
a.u1 u2 ; v/ D 0, and taking v D u1 u2 we obtain
0 D a.u1 u2 ; u1 u2 / ku1 u2 k2 ;
whence u1 D u2 . We have come to a contradiction, which proves the uniqueness.
t
u
Remark 3.1. If L is a linear and continuous functional on the Banach space B, we
will write L 2 B0 , the dual space of B, and we will use the notation L.v/ D hL; vi
for v 2 B.
Exercise 3.1. Prove that the whole sequence of approximate solutions converges
weakly to u.
As a corollary we obtain the following
Theorem 3.3 (RieszFrchet Theorem for Separable Spaces). Let H be a separable Hilbert space with scalar product .; / and norm k k and let L 2 H 0 be
a linear and continuous functional on H. Then there exists a unique element u 2 H
such that
.u; v/ D L.v/
and kuk D kLkH 0 .
for each
v2H
42
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Remark 3.2. In the above two theorems the separability of the space H is not
essential; for the proofs see [110].
Fixed Point Theorems Fixed point theorems are the basic tool that we shall use.
We begin with the Banach contraction principle, the only theorem in this subsection
that guarantees the uniqueness of the fixed point. The existence of a unique fixed
point is a strong condition, however, and in most cases we shall make use of the
Schauder or the LeraySchauder theorems. They both follow from the Brouwer
fixed point theorem.
Theorem 3.4 (Banach Contraction Principle). Let T be an operator defined on
the Banach space X with values in X. Assume that T is a contraction, i.e., that a
number , 0 < 1, exists such that for all pairs of elements u; v 2 X we have
kTu TvkX ku vkX :
Then there exists a unique element u 2 X such that Tu D u.
Proof. Let u0 be an arbitrary element of the space X. Then the sequence
u0 ; u1 ; u2 ; : : :, where for n 1, un are defined recursively by un D Tun1 , converges
in X to the fixed point of the operator T.
t
u
Exercise 3.2. Provide the details of the proof and show that
kun ukX
n1
ku1 u0 kX ;
1
for n D 1; 2; : : : .
Theorem 3.5 (Brouwer). Let K be a nonempty, convex, and compact set in Rn . If
T W K!K is a continuous mapping, then it has at least one fixed point, that is, there
exists u0 2 K such that T.u0 / D u0 .
t
u
1ir.n/
1
n
for each
x 2 T.K/ :
43
Let Xn be the linear hull of the set fx1 ; : : : ; xr.n/ g, that is, the set of all points of the
form 1 x1 C : : : C r.n/ xr.n/ , where 1 , : : :, r.n/ are arbitrary real numbers. We will
write Xn D span fx1 ; : : : ; xr.n/ g. Set Kn D K \ Xn . The set Kn is convex, bounded,
closed, nonempty, and lies in a finite dimensional subspace of X. We define the map
Tn W K!Kn by
Tn .x/ D F 1 T.x/ ;
n
where
Pr.n/
mi .x/xi
;
F" .x/ D PiD1
r.n/
iD1 mi .x/
mi .x/ D
8
< " kx xi kX when
:
kx xi kX < " ;
kx xi kX " :
when
P
1
mi .Tx/kTx xi kX
P
< :
mi .Tx/
n
(3.3)
(3.4)
44
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Proof (cf. [110]). We may assume without loss of generality that M D 1. Let us
define the map T by
8
Tx
if kTxkX 1 ;
<
T x D
Tx
:
if kTxkX > 1 :
kTxkX
Then, T is a continuous mapping of the closed unit ball B.1/ D fx 2 X W kxkX 1g
into itself. Since the set TB.1/ is precompact, the same is true for T B.1/.
From the Schauder fixed point theorem it follows that T has a fixed point x. We
shall show that x is a fixed point of T. In fact, if kTxkX > 1, then x D T x D Tx
1
with D kTxk
and kxkX D kT xkX D 1, which contradicts (3.4).
t
u
X
In Chaps. 5 and 15 we will use the following KakutaniFanGlicksberg fixed point
theorem (see [3], Corollary 17.55) to prove the existence of weak solutions.
Theorem 3.8 (KakutaniFanGlicksberg). Let S X be nonempty, compact,
and convex set, where X is a locally convex Hausdorff topological vector space and
let the multifunction ' W S ! 2S have nonempty convex values and closed graph.
Then the set of fixed point of ' (i.e., fx 2 S W x 2 '.x/g) is nonempty and compact.
jf jp dx
1=p
is a norm in Lp ./ (provided that we identify functions that are equal to each other
almost everywhere in ).
The space Lp ./ is a Banach space. For p D 2 it is a Hilbert space with the scalar
product
Z
.f ; g/ D
fg dx:
We have
Theorem 3.9. Let ffn g be a Cauchy sequence in Lp ./, that is,
lim kfm fn kLp ./ D 0:
m;n!1
45
Then there exists f 2 Lp ./ and a subsequence ff g of the sequence ffn g such that
lim kf f kLp ./ D 0
!1
(completeness of Lp ./), and f .x/ ! f .x/ for almost all x 2 . Moreover there
exists h 2 Lp ./ with h.x/ 0 a.e. in such that jf .x/j h.x/ for a.e. x 2 .
Definition 3.2. By L1 ./ we denote the set of measurable real functions f on
for which
ess supfjf .x/j W x 2 g inffk > 0 W .fx 2 W jf .x/j > kg/ D 0g < 1:
The linear space L1 ./ with norm
kf kL1 ./ D ess supfjf .x/j W x 2 g
is a Banach space.
We say that a real-valued function f on is locally integrable on , and write
1
f 2 Lloc
./, if for every compact K , f is integrable on K.
p
Similarly, we define spaces Lloc ./, for 1 < p < 1.
For f defined on we define the support of f as the closure of the set
fx 2 W f .x/ 0g, and denote it by supp f .
Let D .1 ; : : : ; n / be a multi-index the coordinates of which are nonnegative
integers. We write jj D 1 C C n , and
D D
@jj
:
@1 x1 @n xn
1
\
Ck ./:
kD1
f ' dx D 0
46
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Exercise 3.4. Using Lemma 3.2 show that if f 2 Cjj ./, then f D D f ; that
is, there exists the generalized derivative f , and it equals the usual classical partial
derivative D f .
Exercise 3.5. Prove that generalized partial derivatives are uniquely determined
(provided that they exist).
Exercise 3.6. Let be the interval .0; 1/ on the real line, and let f .x/ D jxj. Prove
that f has the generalized first derivative f 0 , and f 0 .x/ D sgn x almost everywhere
in .
In the sequel we shall write D f instead of f for generalized derivatives.
Definition 3.4 (Sobolev Space W m;p ./). Let m be a positive integer, 1 p < 1.
By W m;p ./ we denote a linear subspace of elements f in Lp ./ for which
generalized partial derivatives D f exist for all jj m and belong to Lp ./, with
norm
11=p
0
X
p
kf kW m;p ./ D @
kD f kLp ./ A :
(3.5)
jjm
Lemma 3.3 (cf. [2, 142]). The space W m;p ./ is a Banach space. For 1 < p < 1
W m;p ./ is reflexive.
Exercise 3.7. Prove that the space W m;p ./ is complete.
Hint. Use Theorem 3.9, Lemma 3.2, and Definition 3.4.
Lemma 3.4. For 1 < p < 1 every bounded sequence in W m;p ./ contains a
weakly convergent subsequence.
Proof. The space W m;p ./ is reflexive.
Definition 3.5. By
of W m;p ./.
m;p
W0 ./
t
u
C01 ./
in the norm
The spaces W m;p ./ are also denoted by Wpm ./. The spaces W m;2 ./ and
denoted also by H m ./ and H0m ./, respectively, are Hilbert spaces with
scalar product
W0m;2 ./,
.f ; g/ D
X Z
jjm
D fD g dx:
47
Definition 3.6. Let m be a positive integer, 1 < p < 1, and 1=p C 1=q D 1.
By W m;q ./ we denote the space of linear continuous functionals on the space
m;p
W0 ./.
The spaces W m;2 ./ are also denoted by H m ./.
Now we shall define distributions and distributional derivatives.
Let us introduce in the set C01 ./ the following notion of convergence.
Definition 3.7. We say that a sequence f'n g C01 ./ converges to zero if there
exists a compact K such that
(i) supp 'n K for each 'n ,
(ii) lim D 'n D 0 for each multi-index , uniformly on .
n!1
We denote by D./ the set C01 ./ together with the convergence introduced
above.
Definition 3.8. We call the map T W D./ ! R a distribution on if it is linear,
that is,
T.' C / D T.'/ C T. /
for all ; 2 R and ';
2 D./, and if
lim T.'n / D 0
n!1
f ' dx
f ' dx :
48
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
@T
@'
; ' D T;
@xi
@xi
If the boundary of is smooth enough, say 2 C0;1 , then the Sobolev spaces
W ./ defined as in Definition 3.4 above can be described alternatively as the
closure of the set Cm ./ in the norm (3.5), cf. [142]. From this new definition
of W m;p ./ it is clear that the set Cm ./ is dense in W m;p ./ (provided that the
boundary of is smooth enough).
Still another description, equivalent to Definition 3.4, of Sobolev spaces can be
given in terms of distributions. We define the space W m;p ./ as the linear subspace
of those f 2 Lp ./ for which all distributional derivatives D f , jj m, belong to
Lp ./, with norm (3.5).
m;p
49
p
Lemma 3.5 (A Version of the Rellich Theorem, cf. [182]). Let be an open
and bounded subset of Rn . Then the embedding of H01 ./ in L2 ./ is compact.
Theorem 3.11 ([105, Theorem 10.1], [235, p. 1034]). Let be a bounded domain
in Rn with Lipschitz boundary, and let u be any function in W m;r ./ \ Lq ./,
1 r; q 1. For any multi-index j, 0 jjj < m, and for any number
from the
interval jjj=m
1, set
1
1 m
jjj
1
D
C
C .1
/ :
p
m
r
n
q
If m jjj n=r is not a nonnegative integer, then
kDj ukLp ./ Ckuk
W m;r ./ kuk1
Lq ./ :
(3.6)
1=4
50
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
x1
x1
2
@u
.t; x2 ; : : : ; xn / dt .x1 x /
1
@t
C1
1
@u 2
x1
where
D infft W u.t; x2 ; : : : ; xn / D 0; .t; x2 ; : : : ; xn / 2 g: Integrating with
respect to x1 we obtain
Z C1
Z
d2 C1 @u 2
2
ju.x/j dx1
.x/ dx1 :
2 1 @x1
1
Now, integrating with respect to x2 ; : : : ; xn we obtain inequality (3.7) for i D 1 and
u 2 C01 ./. Let u 2 H01 ./. There exists a sequence fun g C01 ./ converging
to u in H01 ./. We prove (3.7) for u, passing to the limit in
@un
d
;
kun kL2 ./ p
2 @xi L2 ./
for i 2 f1; : : : ; ng.
t
u
Corollary 3.1. Let R be an open and bounded set. Then the following two
norms are equivalent in H01 ./:
11=2
0
X
kD uk2L2 ./ A ;
kuk D @kuk2L2 ./ C
n
jjD1
and
0
jjjujjj D @
jjD1
11=2
kD uk2L2 ./ A
51
1=2
(3.8)
Proof (cf. [146]). We shall prove inequality (3.8) for smooth functions with
compact support in , and the general case will follow immediately from the
density of these functions in H01 ./. Let u 2 C01 ./. For convenience we consider
u as defined on the whole space R2 and equal zero outside of .
We have
Z xk
u2 .x1 ; x2 / D 2
uuxk dxk for k D 1; 2 ;
1
so that
max u2 .x1 ; x2 / 2
xk
1
1
juuxk j dxk
C1
max u dx1
x2
1
Z
4
C1
1
(3.9)
max u2 dx2
x1
Z
R2
Z
2
for k D 1; 2 ;
R2
juux2 jdx
juj2 dx
Z
R2
R2
juux1 jdx
jDuj2 dx;
which proves the lemma for smooth functions with compact support in .
t
u
p
1=4
3=4
2kukL2 ./ kDukL2 ./ :
(3.10)
Proof (cf. [146]). As in the above lemma, it suffices to prove inequality (3.10)
for smooth functions with compact support. Let u 2 C01 ./. We have, by (3.8)
and (3.9),
Z
Z
Z C1 Z
u4 dx 2
u2 dx1 dx2
.u2x1 C u2x2 /dx1 dx2 dx3
R3
R2
1
Z
2 max
x3
R2
u2 dx1 dx2
R2
Z
R3
jDuj2 dx
52
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Z
4
Z
juux3 jdx
R3
Z
4
R3
juj2 dx
R3
jDuj2 dx
1=2 Z
R3
jDuj2 dx
3=2
;
t
u
Lemma 3.9 (cf. [146]). Let R be an open and bounded set. Then for all
u 2 H01 ./,
kukL6 ./ 481=6 kDukL2 ./ :
(3.11)
C1
Z
C1
1
Z
9
R2
u dx2 dx3
R2
1
R2
C1
(Z
R1
x2
Z
1
max u dx3
1
C1
Z
9
R2
1
R2
1=2 Z
R2
1=2 )
Z
36
R2
ju ux1 jdx
3
p Y
36 I
iD1
R3
Z
R3
Z
u4 dx2 dx3
Z
R3
R3
ju2xi jdx
u2x2 dx
ju2x2 jdx
1=2
1=2 Z
R3
1=2 Z
R3
u2x3 dx
ju2x3 jdx
1=2
1=2
dx1 :
53
In the end,
( 3
) 1=2
3
Y
Y
p
I 36
kuxi kL2 ./ D 36
kuxi k2L2 ./
iD1
8
<
iD1
36 33
:
3
X
kuxi k2L2 ./
iD1
!3 91=2
=
;
(as .a1 a2 a3 /1=3 .a1 C a2 C a3 /=3 for ai 0), which gives inequality (3.11).
t
u
1
xa
p
ju.s/jds
dx
p
p1
p Z
ju.x/jp dx;
(3.12)
ju.x/jp dx:
(3.13)
and
Z
1
bx
p
ju.s/jds
dx
p
p1
p Z
Proof. Let un .x/ D 0 for x 2 a; a C 1n and un .x/ D u.x/ for x 2 a C 1n ; b . We
prove the first inequality. Integration by parts and Hlder inequality give
Z
1
xa
p
jun .s/jds
Z
dx D
p
jun .s/jds
.b a/p1 .1 p/ a
Z x
.p1/
Z b
1
p
C
jun .s/jds
jun .x/jdx
p 1 a .x a/p1
a
Z x
p1
Z b
1
p
ju.s/jds
jun .x/jdx
p 1 a .x a/p1
a
Z b
Z x
p .p1/=p Z b
1=p
p
1
p
ju
.s/jds
dx
ju
.x/j
dx
:
n
n
p 1 a .x a/p
a
a
a
Thus,
Z
b
a
1
xa
x
a
p
jun .s/jds
dx
p
p1
p Z
ju.x/jp dx
(3.14)
for n 2 N. Applying the Fatou lemma we obtain (3.12). In a similar way we obtain
the second inequality.
54
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Exercise 3.11. Deduce inequality (3.12) from inequality (3.14) and prove
inequality (3.13).
Exercise 3.12. Prove that for v 2 W 1;p .a; b/ with v.a/ D 0, p > 1, the following
inequality holds:
Z
a
p Z
v.x/ p
p
dx
x a
p1
jv 0 .x/jp dx:
X 1
D f .x0 /.x x0 / :
jj0
Characterization of Sobolev Spaces Hps .Q/ by Using the Fourier Series Each
function u 2 Cp1 .Q/ has a representation
u.x/ D
ck e2ik L ;
k2Zm
where ck are complex numbers. We consider real functions, for which ck D ck . It
is known that for functions from Cp1 .Q/ the above series converges uniformly.
We have
2i jj X
x
ck k e2ik L :
D u.x/ D
L
k2Zm
55
2
L
2jj X
jck j2 k2 :
k2Zm
X
1 C jkj2s jck j2
) 1=2
:
k2Zm
Lemma 3.10. The norms k kHps and k kHfs .Q/ are equivalent, that is
c1 kukHfs .Q/ kukHps .Q/ c2 kukHfs .Q/
for all u 2 Hps .Q/ and some positive constants c1 ; c2 .
Proof. For every integer s there exist positive constants C1 , C2 such that for all
k 2 Rm
P
2
0jjs k
C1
C2 :
(3.15)
1 C jkj2s
Now,
X
kuk2Hps .Q/ D
kD uk2L2 .Q/ D Lm
0jjs
c
X
k2Zm
0
@
X 2 2jj
L
0jjs
0jjs
!
jck j2 k2
k2Zm
X
1 C jkj2s jck j2 D cC2 kuk2H s .Q/ :
f
k2Zm
Setting c2 D cC2 we have the second inequality of the lemma. Using once
again (3.15) we obtain the first inequality of the lemma.
t
u
We have thus
Lemma 3.11. The space Hps .Q/ coincides with
(
u 2 L2 .Q/ W u.x/ D
2ik Lx
ck e
ck D ck ;
k2Zm
)
jkj2s jck j2 < 1 :
k2Zm
56
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
(of these u 2 Hps .Q/ for which c0 D 0 in their series representation) the expression
X
kukHP ps .Q/ D
!1=2
2s
jkj jck j
k2Zm
kukL2 .Q/
(3.16)
kDuk2L2 .Q/ D
kD uk2L2 .Q/ D
jjD1
Lm
jjD1
2
L
2
L
2
2
L
jck j2 jkj2
k2Zm nf0g
jck j D
k2Zm nf0g
2
L
2
kukL2 .Q/ ;
t
u
jkj2s ck dk ;
k2Zm
for u.x/ D
k2Zm
1
Lm
k2Zm
u.x/e2ik L dx:
Q
x
m
.
2
Then
X
(
k2Zm
jck j
k2Zm
X
k2Zm
57
1
1 C jkj2s
1
jkj2s /1=2
.1 C
) 1=2 (
m
2
we have
1=2
1 C jkj2s
jck j
X
1 C jkj2s jck j2
) 1=2
D C.s/kukHps .Q/ :
k2Zm
P
Moreover, the absolute convergence of the series of coefficients k2Zm jck j implies
the uniform convergence of the Fourier series of u and, in consequence, the
continuity of u.
t
u
P
1
Exercise 3.13. Prove that for s > m2 the series k2Zm 1Cjkj
2s is convergent.
Exercise 3.14. Prove that if s > m2 D j and u 2 Hps .Q/ then u is j times continuously
differentiable function in Q (we write u 2 Cj .Q/) and
X
sup jD u.x/j C.s/kukHps .Q/ :
kukCj .Q/ D
jjj
x2Q
58
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Exercise 3.16. Let uj converge weakly to u? in Hp1 .Q/. Prove that it is equivalent to
the convergence of all Fourier coefficients, namely, cj;k ! c?k as j ! 1, for every
k 2 Zm .
We shall prove that the subsequence uj converges to u? in L2 .Q/. Observe that
X
1 C jkj2 jcj;k c?k j2 4M;
k2Zm
whence
kuj u? k2L2 .Q/ D
jcj;k c?k j2
jcj;k c?k j2 C
jkjK
k2Zm
1 X
jcj;k c?k j2 jkj2
K2
jkj>K
jcj;k c?k j2 C
jkjK
4M
:
K2
(3.17)
(3.18)
(3.19)
Exercise 3.18. Prove that if u 2 Hps .Q/ satisfies (3.18) then also (3.19) holds.
It then follows that
Z
f .x/dx D 0;
Q
59
and
u.x/ D
ck e2ik L ;
u0 D 0:
(3.20)
k2Zm
We compute
u.x/ D
2
L
2 X
jkj2 uk e2ik L D
k2Zm
fk e2ik L D f ;
k2Zm
L 2 fk
4 2 jkj2
k 6D 0:
for
(3.21)
P p2 .Q/ and
for all v in CP p1 .Q/, then u 2 H
kukHP p2 .Q/ Ckf kL2 .Q/ :
(3.23)
Proof. First, observe that in the above integral identity we can take the test functions
P p1 .Q/. Then the existence of a unique generalized solution in
from the space H
P p1 .Q/ follows easily from the RieszFrchet theorem. This solution is given
H
by (3.20) where the coefficients are given in (3.21). Moreover, the solution belongs
P p2 .Q/, as
to H
kuk2HP 2 .Q/ D
p
jkj4 juk j2 D
k2Zm
k2Zm
D
This ends the proof.
jkj4
L 2 fk
4 2 jkj2
2
L4 X
L4
2
jf
j
D
kf kL2 .Q/ :
k
16 4 k2Zm
16 4
t
u
60
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
1
X
j .u; !j /H !j
jD1
on its domain
8
9
1
1
<
=
X
X
D.A/ D u W u D
cj !j ;
jcj j2 2j < 1 :
:
;
jD1
jD1
D.A/ is a Hilbert space with the inner product .u; v/D.A/ D .Au; Av/H and
corresponding norm kukD.A/ D kAukH .
61
k2Z nf0g
r
D
where
r
.c/
!k .x/
.:/
and A!k D
Lm
2
.c/
.s/
k2.Zm nf0g/=2
2
x
;
cos
2k
Lm
L
4 2 jkj2 .:/
!k ,
L2
r
.s/
!k .x/
2
x
;
sin
2k
Lm
L
.:/
q
k12 C k22 D 1.
0 < 1 2 3 : : : n : : : :
.c/
.s/
.s/
!.0;1/ , !4 D !.0;1/ .
n!1
for a.e.
t 2 I:
P
A function v W I ! V is simple if v.t/ D m
kD1 Ak .t/wk for all t 2 I, where Ak are
Lebesgue measurable subsets of I, and wk 2 V.
62
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
n!1 I
(3.24)
Definition 3.14. If the function v W I ! V is simple then its Bochner integral over
the Lebesgue measurable set E I can be defined as
Z
v.t/ dt D
E
m
X
wk m.Ak \ E/:
iD1
Z
v.t/ dt D lim
n!1 E
vn .t/ dt;
kf .t/kV dt
1p
<1
for
p 2 1; 1/;
p D 1:
Once we identify any two functions which differ only of a subset of I of Lebesgue
measure zero, the space Lp .II V/ endowed with the norm k kLp .IIV/ becomes a
63
Z
v; u.t/ dt
I
Z
D
V 0 V
Moreover from
un ! u
vn ! v
weakly in
Lq .II V 0 /;
it follows that
Z
Z
hvn .t/; un .t/iV 0 V dt !
u0 .r/ dr:
64
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
whenever
u2H
v 2 V:
and
(3.26)
The following results which hold in the framework of evolution triples will be
frequently used later.
Corollary 3.2. Let V H V 0 be an evolution triple such that V H is
additionally compact and V is Hilbert. Let A W V ! V 0 be a linear operator
which is
bounded (kAukV 0 kAkL .VIV 0 / kuk for all u 2 V),
symmetric (hAu; vi D hAv; ui for all u; v 2 V),
coercive (hAu; ui kuk2 for all u 2 V with > 0).
Then A satisfies the assumptions of Theorem 3.15 and we can construct an
orthogonal in V and orthonormal in H basis of eigenfunctions !j of A with the
corresponding eigenvalues such that jj j ! 1 as j ! 1.
Proof. The LaxMilgram lemma (cf. Lemma 3.2) implies that for any f 2 H there
exists a unique v 2 V such that Av D f . Hence the range of A (treated as an operator
from D.A/ H to H) is whole H and A1 W H ! H is well defined. Moreover,
by (3.26), A, when treated as an operator on H, is symmetric. Obviously A1 is
linear. To prove compactness of A1 let fn be a bounded sequence in H. Let un 2 V
be such that Aun D fn . Coercivity of A implies that the sequence un is bounded in V
and hence, by the compactness of the embedding V H, for a subsequence, un ! u
strongly in H for certain u 2 H. The proof of compactness is complete.
t
u
Theorem 3.17 (cf. [197, Lemma 7.5]). Let V H V 0 , A W V ! V 0 , and !j be
as in Corollary
3.2. Denote Vn D spanf!1 ; : : : ; !n g. If we define Pn W V 0 ! Vn by
Pn
Pn v D iD1 hv; !i iwi for v 2 V 0 then we have
if v 2 V
then
kPn vk kvk
if v 2 H
then
if v 2 V 0
then
and
lim kPn v vk D 0;
n!1
lim jPn v vj D 0;
n!1
and
n!1
65
Lemma 3.16 (cf. [234, Proposition 23.23], [219, Chap. 3, Lemma 1.2]). Let
V H V 0 be an evolution triple, let I D .t1 ; t2 / be a finite time interval,
and let 1 < p < 1 and 1p C 1q D 1. Then
1. The space W .I/ D fu 2 Lp .II V/ W u0 2 Lq .II V 0 /g is a Banach space equipped
with the norm
kukW .I/ D kukLp .IIV/ C ku0 kLq .IIV 0 / :
2. The space W .I/ embeds continuously in C.II H/, i.e., every function from W .I/
is almost everywhere equal to a continuous function with values in H, and we
have
max ju.t/j CkukW .I/
u 2 W .I/:
for all
t2I
3. We have the following integration by parts formula valid for all u; v 2 W .I/,
Z
.u.t1 /; v.t1 // .u.t0 /; v.t0 // D hv 0 .t/; u.t/i C hu0 .t/; v.t/i dt:
I
4. For any u 2 W .I/ the following equality holds in the sense of distributions on I
d
ju.t/j2 D 2hu0 .t/; u.t/i:
dt
Corollary 3.3. Let V; H; p; q be as in the previous Lemma. Let un ! u weakly in
Lp .II V/ and u0n ! v weakly in Lq .II V 0 /. Then v D u0 and un .t/ ! u.t/ weakly in
H for all t 2 I.
Proof. The fact that v D u0 follows, for example, from Proposition 23.19 in [234].
We will prove the second assertion. We have
Z
un .s/ D un .t/ C
s
u0n .r/dr
s; t 2 I:
for all
Taking the duality with any v 2 V and integrating with respect to t over I we get
Z
.t1 t0 /.un .s/; v/ D
Z Z
.un .t/; v/ dt C
.un .t/; v/ dt C
D
I
hu0n .r/; vi dr dt
where s D .t0 s/.t0 ;s/ C .t1 s/.s;t1 / . The assertion follows by passing to the
limit n ! 1 in the last formula and using the density of the embedding V H. u
t
We now recall two important results on the triples of spaces V1 V2 V3 , where
the embedding V1 V2 is compact. The first result is known as the Ehrling lemma.
66
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Lemma 3.17 (See [204, Lemma 7.6]). Let V1 V2 V3 be three Banach spaces
with all embeddings continuous and V1 V2 compact. Then for any " > 0 there
exists a constant C."/ such that
kvkV2 "kvkV1 C C."/kvkV3
v 2 V1 :
for all
Thus we have
Z
I
67
t2I
ku.t/k2H 1 ./ dt;
t
u
for a:e:
t 2 .t0 ; 1/;
(3.27)
then
Rt
x.t/ x.t0 /e
t0
Z
k.s/ ds
Rt
h.s/e
k.r/ dr
ds
for all
t 2 t0 ; 1/:
(3.28)
t0
h.s/eCs ds
for all
t 2 t0 ; 1/:
(3.29)
t0
D Ct0 Ct
.e
e 1/
C
Rt
t0
k.s/ ds
x.t/k.t/e
Rt
t0
k.s/ ds
h.t/e
Rt
t0
Rt
t0
k.s/ ds
k.s/ ds
we get
a.e. t > t0 ;
(3.30)
68
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
whence
Rt
Rt
d
x.t/e t0 k.s/ ds h.t/e t0 k.s/ ds
dt
for a.e.
t > t0 :
tCr
t
tCr
k.s/ ds a1 ;
for a:e:
tCr
h.s/ ds a2 ;
t 2 .t0 ; 1/;
x.s/ ds a3
for all
(3.31)
t 2 t0 ; 1/;
C a2 ea1
t 2 t0 ; 1/:
for all
Rp
t
k. / d
h.p/
a.e.
p 2 .t; t C r/:
We fix s 2 .t; t C r/ and integrate the last inequality over the interval .s; t C r/.
We get
Z tCr
R tCr
Rs
t
k. / d
t k. / d
x.s/e
h.p/ dp a2 ;
x.t C r/e
s
x.t C r/ x.s/e
k. / d
R tCr
C a2 e
k. / d
x.s/ea1 C a2 ea1 ;
69
valid for all s 2 .t; t C r/. We integrate the last inequality with respect to s over the
interval .t; t C r/, which gives us
Z
rx.t C r/
tCr
t
u
t > t0 ;
a:e:
(3.32)
2 r
e 2
r
tC 2r
x.s/ ds C e.rCt/
tCr
h.s/es ds:
tC1
x.s/ ds C e.tC2/
tC2
h.s/es ds:
Proof. Multiplying (3.32) written for p t0 by the integrating factor ep , we get
d
.x.p/ep / D x0 .p/ep C x.p/ep h.p/ep
dp
a.e.
p t0 :
Let t t0 and r > 0. We fix s 2 t; t C 2r and integrate the last inequality over the
interval .s; t C r/ leading to
x.t C r/e.tCr/ x.s/es
tCr
h.p/ep dp;
whence we have
.str/
x.t C r/ x.s/e
.tCr/
Ce
tCr
h.p/ep dp
.str/
x.s/e
.tCr/
Ce
tCr
h.p/ep dp:
70
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
We integrate the last inequality with respect to s over the interval .t; t C 2r /, which
gives
r
x.t C r/
2
tC 2r
.str/
x.s/e
r
ds C e.tCr/
2
tCr
h.s/es ds;
t
u
lim sup
t!1
1
T
1
t!1 T
1
T
Z
Z
tCT
./d > 0;
(3.33)
. /d < 1;
(3.34)
C . /d D 0;
(3.35)
t
tCT
lim
tCT
where .t/ D maxf.t/; 0g, C .t/ D maxf.t/; 0g. Suppose that D .t/ is
an absolutely continuous nonnegative function on 0; 1/ that satisfies the following
inequality almost everywhere on .0; 1/,
d.t/
C .t/.t/ .t/:
dt
(3.36)
Then .t/ ! 0 as t ! 1.
For the proof, see [99].
71
y!x;!0C
Definition 3.17. Let j W X ! R be locally Lipschitz. The generalized subdifferential in the sense of Clarke of the functional j at the point x 2 X is the set @j.x/ X 0
defined as
@j.x/ D f 2 X 0 W h; hiX 0 X j0 .xI h/
for all
h 2 Xg:
(3.37)
We recall some results on the properties of the Clarke subdifferential and Clarke
generalized directional derivative.
Proposition 3.3 (cf. [72, Proposition 2.1.1]). If j W X ! R is locally Lipschitz,
then j0 W X X ! R is upper semicontinuous, i.e.,
n ! x; hn ! h ) lim sup j0 .xn I hn / j0 .xI h/
for all
x; h 2 X:
n!1
Moreover, j0 .xI / is Lipschitz on X with the Lipschitz constant equal to the local
Lipschitz constant kO of j at x given in Definition 3.15.
Proposition 3.4 (cf. [72, Proposition 2.1.2]). If j W X ! R is locally Lipschitz,
then for every x 2 X, the set @j.x/ is nonempty, weakly-* compact, and convex.
Moreover, for every 2 @j.x/ we have kkX kO (where kO is the local Lipschitz
constant of j at x given in Definition 3.15) and we have
j0 .xI h/ D max h; hiX 0 X
[email protected]/
for all
x; h 2 X:
72
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
Theorem 3.19 (see [72, Theorem 2.5.1]). Let j W Rd ! R be locally Lipschitz then
@j.s/ D convf lim rj.sn / W sn ! s; sn S [ Nj g for s 2 Rd ;
n!1
(3.38)
where S is any Lebesgue null set, and Nj is the Lebesgue null set on which j is not
differentiable.
We recall the Lebourg mean value theorem (cf. [72, Theorem 2.3.7])
Theorem 3.20. Let X be a Banach space and j W X ! R be a locally Lipschitz
functional. For any x; y 2 X there exists
2 .0; 1/ and 2 @j.
x C .1
/y/ such
that h; y xiX 0 X D j.y/ j.x/.
We are in position to prove the approximation theorem for Clarke subdifferentials.
Theorem 3.21. Let j W Rd ! R be a locally Lipschitz functional such that the
growth condition jj C.1 C jsj/ holds for all s 2 Rd and all 2 @j.s/ with
C > 0. Let moreover n W Rd ! R be a sequence of mollifier kernels given by
n .r/ D nd .nr/ Rfor r 2 Rd , where W Rd ! R is a function such that 2 C1 .Rd /,
.s/ 0 on Rd , Rd .s/ ds D 1, and supp 1; 1d . Define
Z
n .r/j.s r/ dr:
jn .s/ D
Rd
Then
(A) jn 2 C1 .Rd /,
(B) jrjn .s/j D.1 C jsj/ for all s 2 Rd with D > 0 independent of n,
(C) if .; ; / is a finite and complete measure space and vn 2 L2 ./d , is a
sequence such that vn ! v strongly in L2 ./d and rjn .vn / ! weakly in
L2 ./d , then .x/ 2 @j.v.x// -a.e. in .
Proof. The assertion .A/ follows, for example, from [93], Theorem 6, Appendix C.
Let us prove .B/. Let h 2 Rd . We have
jn .s C h/ jn .s/
D lim
!0
!0
Z
supp n
n .r/
j.s C h r/ j.s r/
dr:
j.s C h r/ j.s r/
jz.s; h; r/jjhj C.1 C jsj C jrj C
jjjhj/jhj;
where z.s; h; r/ 2 @j.s r C
h/ with
2 .0; 1/ possibly changing from point to
point. We get
Z
jrjn .s/ hj C lim
!0 supp n
73
d
As supp n 1n ; 1n we have
1
n .r/ 1 C jsj C C jj dr C.2 C jsj/;
n
supp n
Z
jrjn .s/j C lim
!0
and the assertion .B/ follows. We pass to the proof of .C/. As vn ! v in L2 ./d
we also have, for a subsequence, vn .x/ ! v.x/ and jvn .x/j h.x/ for -a.e. x 2
with h 2 L2 ./. The further argument will be done for this subsequence. Take
w 2 L1 ./d . From the weak convergence rjn .vn / ! it follows that
Z
n!1
Z
where the use of the Fatou lemma is justified by the growth condition .B/ and the
bound jvn .x/j h.x/. We estimate the integrand for -a.e. x 2 as follows
lim sup rjn .vn .x// w.x/ D lim sup lim
n!1
n!1
n!1 !0C
n!1 r2supp n
!0C
D lim sup
n!1
!0C
!0C
supp n
n .s/
where rn; 2 supp n is such that the supremum over r of the difference quotient
is achieved. Observe that as n ! 1 we must have vn .x/ rn; ! v.x/. From the
definition of the Clarke directional derivative we get
lim sup rjn .vn .x// w.x/ lim sup
n!1
z!v.x/
!0C
whereas
Z
(3.39)
74
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
that j0 .v.x/I w.x// .x/ w.x/ 0 for -a.e. x 2 for all w 2 L1 ./d . Indeed,
suppose it is not the case. Then for a certain wN 2 L1 ./d and set N of positive
N
.x/ w.x/
N
< 0. Take wO D w
N on N
measure we have the inequality j0 .v.x/I w.x//
and wO D 0 on n N. We have wO 2 L1 ./d and
Z
Z
j0 .v.x/I w.x//
O
.x/ w.x/
O
d .x/ D
j0 .v.x/I w.x//
N
.x/ w.x/
N
d .x/ < 0;
fwn g1
nD1
0
k!1
Theorem 3.22. Let .; ; / be a -finite measure space, and let d be a positive
natural number, and 1 p < 1. Let un ! u weakly in Lp ./d and un .
/ 2 G.
/
for -a.e.
2 and all n 2 N, where G.
/ Rd is a nonempty, compact set for
-a.e.
2 . Then
u.x/ 2 conv K- lim sup fun .x/g :
n!1
Theorem 3.23. Let .; ; / be a -finite measure space and let W D Lp ./d
with a positive natural number d and 1 < p < 1. Assume that the multifunction
d
h W Rd ! 2R satisfies the assumptions
.h1/ for every s 2 Rd the multifunction
! h.
; s/ has a measurable selection,
i.e., there exists a measurable function f W ! Rd such that f .
/ 2 h.
; s/ for
-a.e.
2 ,
.h2/ the set h.
; s/ is nonempty, compact, and convex in Rd , for all s 2 Rd and
for -a.e.
2 ,
.h3/ graph of s ! h.
; s/ is a closed set in R2d for -a.e.
2 ,
.h4/ we have jj c1 .
/ C c2 jsjp1 for all s 2 Rd , -a.e.
2 and all 2
h.
; s/, with c2 > 0 and c1 2 Lq ./, where 1q C 1p D 1.
75
0
-a.e. on
g;
satisfies
.H1/
.H2/
.H3/
W0
D sup
kwkW D1
Z
.
/ w.
/ d sup
kwkW D1
.c1 .
/ C c2 ju.
/jp1 /jw.
/j d :
Hence we have
p1
p1
kkW 0 sup .kc1 kLq ./ kwkW C c2 kukW kwkW / D kc1 kLq ./ C c2 kukW ;
kwkW D1
(3.40)
and .H3/ is proved. We pass to the proof of .H1/. Let u 2 W. Consider a
multifunction 3
! h.
; u.
// Rd . We will show that this multifunction has
a measurable selection. Let vn W ! Rd be a sequence of simple (i.e., piecewise
constant and measurable) functions such that jvn .
/j ju.
/j and vn .
/ ! u.
/
a.e.
2 . By .h1/ it follows that there exists the sequence of measurable functions
n W ! Rd such that n .
/ 2 h.
; vn .
// a.e.
2 . By (3.40) it follows that
p1
p1
weakly in W 0
for certain 2 W 0 :
(3.41)
a.e.
2 ;
(3.42)
76
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
2 and jun .
/j f .
/ for a.e.
2 with f 2 Lp ./. Since we already know
that 2 W we must prove that .
/ 2 h.
; u.
// for a.e.
2 . The proof of this
assertion exactly follows the lines of the proof of (3.42) in .H1/, which completes
the proof of the theorem.
t
u
Remark 3.4. The assertion .H2/ of the above Lemma also follows directly by the
application of the convergence theorem of Aubin and Cellina (see Theorem 7.2.1 in
[8] or Theorem 1.4.1 in [7]).
We will use the notation
q
H.u/ D Sh.;u.// ;
as H.u/ is the set of all selections of the class Lq ./d of the multifunction
3
! h.
; u.
// Rd . The operator H is known as the Nemytskii operator
for a multifunction h.
Now we present a version of above theorem valid if the multifunction h has
the form of a Clarke subdifferential. In such a case the above theorem simplifies.
Note that for a functional of more than one variable, say '.
; s/, by @'.
; s/ we will
always understand the Clarke subdifferential taken with respect to the last variable s.
Theorem 3.24. Let .; ; / be a finite and complete measure space and denote
W D Lp ./d with d 2 N and 1 < p < 1. Assume that the functional
' W Rd ! R satisfies the assumptions
.'1/ for every s 2 Rd the function 3
! '.
; s/ is measurable,
.'2/ for -almost all
2 the function Rd 3 s ! '.
; s/ is locally Lipschitz,
.'3/ jj c1 .
/ C c2 jsjp1 for all s 2 Rd , -a.e.
2 and all 2 @'.
; s/, with
c2 > 0 and c1 2 Lq ./, where 1q C 1p D 1.
0
-a.e. on
g
satisfies
.H1/ H has nonempty and convex values,
.H2/ the graph of H is sequentially closed in .W; strong/ .W 0 ; weak/ topology,
p1
.H3/ we have kkW kc1 kLq ./ C c2 kukW for all w 2 W and 2 H.u/.
77
Proof. We will use Theorem 3.23. The hypothesis .h4/ follows from .'3/ while the
hypotheses .h2/ and .h3/ follow from the properties of the Clarke subdifferential
(Propositions 3.4 and 3.5). It remains to prove .h1/. To this end consider the integral
functional
Z
I.u/ D
'.
; u.
// d for u 2 Lp ./d :
We use Theorem 5.6.39 in [84] (see also Theorem 2.7.5 in [72], where, however,
c1 is assumed to be a constant and not a function of
), whence it follows that I is
locally Lipschitz and
q
@I.u/ S@'.;u.// :
Let s 2 Rd and let us .
/ D s for
2 . As the measure is finite, us 2 Lp ./d .
Since, by Proposition 3.4, @I.us / is nonempty, then there exists 2 Lq ./d such
that .
/ 2 @'.
; s/ for -a.e.
2 and the proof is complete.
t
u
on
u.x; t/ D 0 on
u.x; 0/ D u0 .x/
on
.0; T/;
@ .0; T/;
:
The question arises how to understand the weak solution of the above problem
when g is discontinuous. It turns out that the function g can be replaced with its
multivalued regularization constructed in the following way. First we define the
functional
Z s
j.s/ D
g.s/ ds for s 2 R:
0
78
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
@u.x; t/
u.x; t/ C .x; t/ D f .x; t/
@t
on
.0; T/;
on
.0; T/;
u.x; t/ D 0 on
u.x; 0/ D u0 .x/
on
@ .0; T/;
:
This problem is called a multivalued partial differential equation, a partial differential inclusion, or a subdifferential inclusion and it turns out, that under appropriate
assumptions of f ; u0 and the growth condition on @j it has a weak solution
understood in the following sense.
Find u 2 L2 .0; TI H01 .// with u0 2 L2 .0; TI H 1 .// and 2 L2 .0; TI L2 .//
2
such that u.0/ D u0 , .t/ 2 [email protected]//
, and for a.e. t 2 .0; T/ and all v 2 H01 ./,
hu0 .t/; viH 1 ./H 1 ./ C .ru.t/; rv/L2 ./d C ..t/ f .t/; v/L2 ./ D 0;
0
2
we mean the set of all functions h 2 L2 ./ such
Recall that for v 2 L2 ./ by [email protected]/
that h.x/ 2 @j.v.x// a.e. in . If we identify L2 .0; TI L2 .// D L2 . .0; T//,
2
2
we can also write [email protected]//
D [email protected].;t//
.
We can associate with the above problem the following problem known as
hemivariational inequality.
Find u 2 L2 .0; TI H01 .// with u0 2 L2 .0; TI H 1 .// such that u.0/ D u0 , and
for a.e. t 2 .0; T/ and all v 2 H01 ./,
It follows directly from the definition (3.37) that every solution of above partial
differential inclusion is also a solution of the hemivariational inequality. The
converse also holds true, but this has been shown only recently by Carl (see [49]):
his proof is more involved and uses the notion of upper and lower solutions.
The Clarke subdifferential is very easy to compute in finite dimensions using the
characterization (3.38), when the number of points in which the functional is not
continuously differentiable is a null Lebesgue set.
Example 1. Let us consider the example of the functional ' W R ! R
8
<s 2
'.s/ D s
:s C 2
79
This functional is of class C1 on a neighborhood of every s 62 f1; 1g, and for the
points f1; 1g we take convex hull of left and right derivatives
8
f1g
1; 1
<
@'.s/ D f1g
1; 1
:f1g
for
s < 1;
for
s D 1;
for
s 2 .1; 1/;
for
s D 1;
for
s > 1:
The potential and its subdifferential are both depicted in Fig. 3.1.
1,5
1,5
(s)
1
0,5
2
1,5
0,5
(s)
1
0,5
0
0,5
1,5
S 2 2
1,5
0,5
0,5
0,5
1,5
S2
0,5
1,5
1,5
Fig. 3.1 The example of a simple locally Lipschitz function, which is nondifferentiable in two
points, and its Clarke subdifferential
jss0 j
0
.r/ dr:
(3.43)
It is easy to verify, using the mean value theorem for integrals, that ' is locally
Lipschitz. It is also easy to calculate the gradient of ' for all s s0 , which
establishes the fact that ' is of class C1 on the neighborhood of every s s0 .
The value of the Clarke subdifferential at s0 is obtained by taking the convex hull of
the sphere obtained from limits of the gradients of all sequences converging to s0 .
We get
8n
o
< .js s j/ ss0
0 jss0 j
@'.s/ D
:fy 2 Rd W jyj .0/g D B.0; .0//
for s s0 ;
for s D s0 :
Graphs of ' and @' for d D 1, s0 D 1, and .r/ D 1 r are depicted in Fig. 3.2.
80
3 Mathematical Preliminaries
0,6
1,5
(s)
0,5
0,4
0,5
0,3
1
0,2
0,5
0,5
S
0
0,5
1,5
2,5
0,5
0,1
1
(s)
1
0
0,5
1,5
2,5
1,5
S3
Fig. 3.2 The second example of a nondifferentiable nonconvex potential and its Clarke
subdifferential
for
r 2 0; M/;
for
r 2 M; 1/;
1 js s0 j
for js s0 j 2 0; M/;
1 M C 2 .js s0 j M/
for js s0 j 2 M; 1/:
B.0;
n 1 / o
< 1 ss0
jss0 j
@'.s/ D
.s s0o/ W 2 1 ; 2
: 2 ss0
jss0 j
for s D s0 ;
for js s0 j 2 .0; M/;
for js s0 j D M;
for js s0 j 2 .M; 1/:
j(s)
3
2,5
2
1,5
1
0,5
2
1,5
0,5
S
0
0,5
1,5
1,5
2,5 j(s)
2
1,5
1
0,5
0
0,5
0
0,5
0,5
1
1,5
2
2,5
S
1
1,5
Fig. 3.3 The third example of a locally Lipschitz potential and its Clarke subdifferential
81
if s dom ';
0
where dom ' is the set of all points in which ' in not equal to 1. If a functional
' W X ! R is both convex and locally Lipschitz then both subdifferentials must
coincide (see, e.g., Proposition 2.2.7 in [72]). There are, however, examples where
only one of the two notions makes sense. For the functionals which are locally
Lipschitz and nonconvex we can speak only of the Clarke subdifferential, while for
convex functionals which assume infinite values (and such functionals are useful, for
example, in constrained optimization or in unilateral problems in solid mechanics)
only the convex subdifferential makes sense.
In this chapter we introduce some basic notions from the theory of the Navier
Stokes equations: the function spaces H, V, and V 0 , the Stokes operator A with its
domain D.A/ in H, and the bilinear form B. We apply the Galerkin method and
fixed point theorems to prove the existence of solutions of the nonlinear stationary
problem, and we consider problems of uniqueness and regularity of solutions.
kukH D juj D
and
sZ
jru.x/j2 dx;
kukV D kuk D
83
84
respectively. V and H are Hilbert spaces and V H. If we identify H with its dual
H 0 in view of the RieszFrchet representation theorem, we have V H V 0 with
continuous embeddings and with each space dense in the following one.
v 2 V:
(4.1)
Using this definition we can write the weak formulation of the Stokes problem:
Given f 2 V 0 , find u 2 V and p 2 LP 2 .Q/ such that
u C rp D f ;
div u D 0;
(4.2)
for all
P p1 .Q/3 ;
v2H
(4.3)
for all
v 2 V:
(4.4)
We shall prove that for f 2 H, the Stokes operator coincides with the minus
Laplacian, Au D u. To this end we use the explicit spectral representation of
functions in LP 2 .Q/3 . Assume in the beginning that f 2 LP 2 .Q/3 . Then
f .x/ D
fk e2ik L ;
k2Z 3
fk D fNk ;
jfk j2 < 1;
f0 D 0;
(4.5)
k2Z 3
where fk D .fk1 ; fk2 ; fk3 /. Let u 2 V and p 2 LP 2 .Q/ satisfy (4.3). Assuming that
u.x/ D
uk e2ik L ;
p.x/ D
k2Z 3
pk e2ik L
k2Z 3
2ik
4 2 jkj2
uk C
pk D fk :
2
L
L
L fk k
2i jkj2
for
k 6D 0;
(4.6)
85
fk k
fk k 2
jkj
for
k 6D 0:
1 L2
fk
4 2 jkj2
for
k 6D 0:
Thus, the weak solution u of the Stokes problem (4.4) (with D 1) coincides
with the weak solution of the problem u D f for f 2 H. From this we see
P p2 .Q/3 . Moreover, from the above explicit formulas for the
immediately that u 2 H
Fourier coefficients uk and pk we have the following regularity theorem.
P p2 .Q/3 , p 2 H
P p1 .Q/, and
Theorem 4.1. If f 2 LP p2 .Q/3 , then u 2 H
kuk2HP 2 .Q/3 C kpk2HP 1 .Q/
0
L2
4 2
L2
C
1
kf k2LP 2 .Q/3 :
22
Proof. We have
kuk2HP 2 .Q/3 D
0
jkj4 juk j2 D
k2Z 3
2
jkj4
k2Z 3
jkj4
k2Z 3
1
L4
fk k fk k
2 16 4 jkj4
jkj2
X
1
L4
L4
2
4 1
jf
j
C
2
jkj
jfk j2
k
2 16 4 jkj4
2 16 4 jkj4
3
k2Z
L
kf k2LP 2 .Q/3 ;
4 4 2
and
kpk2HP 1 .Q/ D
p
jkj2 jpk j2 D
k2Z 3
X
k2Z 3
jkj2
L2
4 2
fk k 2
jkj2
X L2
L2
jfk j2 D
kf k2LP 2 .Q/3 ;
2
2
4
4
3
k2Z
t
u
Remark 4.1. Observe that setting f , u, and p of the form (4.5) and (4.6), respectively,
directly to Eqs. (4.2) we would get the same spectral representations of the
solution u, p.
Thus, in particular,
P p2 .Q/3 :
D.A/ D fu 2 V W Au 2 Hg D V \ H
86
in Q ;
div u D 0
in Q ;
kukH D juj D
and
sZ
jru.x/j2 dx;
kukV D kuk D
The Stokes operator A is defined in the same way as in the periodic case (cf. (4.1))
and we have
D.A/ D fu 2 V W Au 2 Hg D V \ H 2 .Q/3 :
For both cases, let us denote b.u; v; w/ D ..u rv/; w/ for u; v; w 2 V and define a
nonlinear operator B W V ! V 0 by .Bu; v/ D b.u; u; v/ for all v 2 V. We shall also
write ..u; v// instead of .ru; rv/.
Exercise 4.1. Prove that for all u; v; w 2 V it is
b.u; v; w/ D b.u; w; v/;
and thus b.u; v; v/ D 0.
87
for all
v2V
or, equivalently,
Au C Bu D f
in H
or
V 0:
Remark 4.2. Concerning regularity of solutions one can prove that if f 2 H then all
solutions u belong to D.A/.
We shall prove the following existence theorem.
Theorem 4.2. Let Q D 0; L3 (for the periodic problem) or let Q be a bounded
domain in R3 with smooth boundary (for the Dirichlet problem). Then
(i) For every f 2 V 0 and > 0 there exists at least one solution of Problem 4.1.
(ii) If 2 c1 .Q/kf kV 0 , then the solution of Problem 4.1 is unique.
Proof. ad .i/. To prove existence of solutions we use the Galerkin method. For every
m 2 N let
um .x/ D
m
X
j;m !j .x/;
j;m 2 R;
jD1
for all
v 2 Vm ;
(4.7)
88
for all v 2 Vm :
for all
v 2 Vm :
Subtracting the equation for w from that for u, setting v D u w, and using the
estimate for the solution v, we obtain
ku wk
C.Q/
kf kV 0 kOu wk
O ;
2
kf kV 0
:
weakly in V;
and
um ! u strongly in H;
as V is compactly embedded in H. Passing with m to the limit in Eq. (4.7) we obtain
equation
..u; v// C b.u; u; v/ D hf ; vi
for all v being a finite linear combination of elements of the basis !k , k 2 N. Since
such elements v are dense in V, the existence part of the theorem has been proved.
Proof of .ii/. To prove uniqueness of solutions for large viscosity coefficients
with respect to mass forces, 2 > c1 .Q/kf kV 0 , let us assume that there are two
distinct solutions u1 and u2 , that is,
..u1 ; v// C b.u1 ; u1 ; v/ D hf ; vi;
and
..u2 ; v// C b.u2 ; u2 ; v/ D hf ; vi
89
for all v 2 V. Setting v D u1 u2 and subtracting the second equation from the first
one we obtain
ku1 u2 k2 D b.u1 u2 ; u2 ; u1 u2 / c1 .Q/ku1 u2 k2 ku2 k
c1 .Q/
kf kV 0 ku1 u2 k2 ;
as ku2 k 1 kf kV 0 , whence
c1 .Q/
0
kf kV ku1 u2 k2 0 ;
which gives a contradiction. Thus u1 D u2 .
t
u
Exercise 4.5. Prove that Theorem 4.2 is valid also in the two-dimensional case,
when Q R2 is a square (in the periodic case) or a bounded domain with smooth
boundary (in the case of the Dirichlet boundary conditions).
In the end we shall show how one can proceed differently to prove existence of the
Galerkin approximate solutions um satisfying (4.7).
Theorem 4.3. Let X be a finite dimensional Hilbert space, with a scalar product
; and the associated norm , and let P W X ! X be a continuous map such that
P./; > 0 for
D k > 0
kP./
;
P./
SWB!B
(4.8)
is continuous in X. From the Brouwer fixed point theorem it follows that S has a
fixed point in B, that is,
0 D
kP.0 /
P.0 /
(4.9)
kP.0 /; 0
;
P.0 /
t
u
90
(4.10)
for all u; v 2 Vm . The map is well defined in view of the RieszFrchet representation theorem. In fact, for every u in Vm the map v ! ..u; v// C b.u; u; v/ hf ; vi
defines a linear and continuous functional on Vm . Thus, there exists a unique Pm .u/
in Vm satisfying the above relation.
The map Pm is continuous in Vm and
Pm .u/; u D kuk2 C b.u; u; u/ hf ; ui D kuk2 hf ; ui
kuk2 kf kV 0 kuk D kukfkuk kf kV 0 g:
kf k
Whence, for k > V 0 and kuk D k we have Pm .u/; u > 0. In view of our auxiliary
theorem, there exists um in Vm such that Pm .um / D 0, that is, (4.7) is satisfied.
t
u
Exercise 4.6. Prove that the maps S defined in (4.8) and Pm defined in (4.10) are
continuous.
for all
v2V
by using
(a) the Schauder fixed point theorem,
(b) the LeraySchauder fixed point theorem,
(c) assuming that the viscosity is large enough with respect to external forces, use
the Banach contraction principle to prove the unique solution u.
Solution to Exercise 4.7. (a) Let us define a map T in V by
..Tu; v// C b.u; Tu; v/ D hf ; vi
for all
v 2V:
91
Using the LaxMilgram lemma we conclude that the map T is well defined. Setting
v D Tu we get
kTuk2 D hf ; Tui kf kV 0 kTuk ;
whence
kTuk
1
kf kV 0 r:
v 2 V;
v 2 V:
and
C
C1
kTu2 kju1 u2 jL4 .Q/3
rku1 u2 k:
for all
v 2V:
(4.11)
Using the RieszFrchet representation theorem we conclude that the map T is well
defined.
Assume that Tu D u, where 2 0; 1. We shall prove that all such u are in
some ball. If D 0, then u D 0. Now, for > 0, Tu D 1 u. Setting v D u in (4.11)
we obtain kuk2 kf kV 0 kuk, whence kuk 1 kf kV 0 M.
Now, we shall prove continuity and compactness of T in V. Let um ; uk be in V.
Then, subtracting the equations for Tum and Tuk , and setting v D Tum Tuk we
obtain
92
kTum Tuk k
v 2 V:
(4.12)
The map is well defined. We shall prove that it is contracting in a ball B.0; r/ in V
provided the viscosity is large enough with respect to external forces. Let
..Tu1 ; v// C b.u1 ; Tu1 ; v/ D hf ; vi for all
v 2 V:
We get
..Tu Tu1 ; v// C b.u; Tu Tu1 ; v/ C b.u u1 ; Tu1 ; v/ D 0
for all v 2 V, whence, with v D Tu Tu1 ,
kTu Tu1 k
C
kTu1 kku u1 k:
C
kf kV 0 ku u1 k:
2
93
Exercise 4.8. Prove the Ladyzhenskaya inequality (3.8) for all functions u 2
P p1 .Q/, Q D 0; L2 , knowing that it holds for all functions u 2 H 1 ./, where
H
0
is a bounded set in R2 .
Exercise 4.9. Using the methods from Exercise 4.7 prove existence of solutions of
the stationary NavierStokes problems in the two-dimensional case, for periodic
and homogeneous boundary conditions, respectively. You may find useful the
Ladyzhenskaya inequality (3.8).
(5.1)
div u D 0 in ;
(5.2)
(5.3)
(5.4)
where un D u n is the outward normal component of the velocity vector, its tangent
component is given by u D u un n on C , and T D Tn .Tn n/n is the tangential
part of the stress vector Tn
Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
G. ukaszewicz, P. Kalita, NavierStokes Equations, Advances
in Mechanics and Mathematics 34, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-27760-8_5
95
96
T D pI C 2D.u/;
(5.5)
Fig. 5.1 The domain of the studied problem. The set is a space between two cylinders. The
Dirichlet boundary is the wall of the outer cylinder, and two rings bounding at top and bottom.
The contact boundary C is the wall of the inner, rotating, cylinder. On D we impose the
homogeneous Dirichlet boundary condition, and on C we impose the frictional contact condition
which allows for the occurrence of either stick, or slip between the liquid and the rotating cylinder
97
a.e. on
C g:
(5.6)
For the first existence result we will need the additional bound on the constant c2
in the growth condition .h4/, dependent on the viscosity coefficient and the norm of
the trace operator k k,
.h5/ c2 k k2 < 2.
For the second existence result, the assumptions .h4/ and .h5/ will be replaced
by the following, weaker ones:
.h6/ there exists 2 p < 4 such that for all s 2 R3 we have
max jj c3 .x/ C c4 jsjp1 for a.e. x 2 C ;
2h.x;s/
2h.x;s/
(5.7)
98
Lemma 5.2. Assume the multifunction h satisfies .h1/.h4/. Then the operator G
given by (5.7) satisfies
.G1/
.G2/
.G3/
jD.u/j2 dx:
(5.8)
kuk D
(5.9)
Z
ui;jj vi dx C
Z
uj ui;j vi dx C
p;i vi dx D
fi vi dx:
p;i vi dx D
pvi;i dx C
pvn dS:
(5.10)
99
Using the fact that div v D 0 and vn D 0 on the whole @, it follows that
Z
p;i vi dx D 0:
(5.11)
we have
Z
ui;jj vi dx D 2
Z
D 2
D.u/ij;j vi dx
D.u/ij vi;j dx 2
Z
D 2
Z
D.u/ij vi;j dx
C
D.u/n vn C D.u/ v dS
T v dS:
D.u/ij vi;j dx D
1
2
D.u/ij vi;j dx C
1
2
D.u/ji vj;i dx
Z
Z
1
1
D
D.u/ij vi;j dx C
D.u/ij vj;i dx
2
2
Z
D
D.u/ij D.v/ij dx:
(5.13)
Z
ui;jj vi dx D 2
Z
D.u/ij D.v/ij dx
C
T v dS:
(5.14)
100
Problem 5.1. Let f 2 L2 ./3 . Find u 2 V and 2 H.u / such that for every v 2 V
Z
Z
2
D.u/ij D.v/ij dx C
C
v dS C
.u r/u v dx D
SK
kD1
f v dx:
(5.15)
Z
D.u/ij D.v/ij dx D
ru rv dx;
(5.16)
Z
ru rv dx C
C
v d C
.u r/u v dx D
f v dx:
Q On each Ck
Let us prove (5.16). To this end first assume that u 2 V and v 2 V.
we can construct an orthonormal basis n; 1 ; 2 , where both vectors 1 ; 2 lie in the
Q On Ck we have rvn D @vn nC @vn 1 C @vn 1 D @vn n, where
surface Ck . Take v 2 V.
@n
@1
@1
@n
the last equality follows from the fact that vn D 0 on Ck . Now, we have
Z
uj;i vi;j dx D
uj vi;ij dx C
uj vi;j ni dS:
@vn
n dS D
uj;i vi;j dx D
uj vi;j ni dS D
u
@n
C
C
Z
C
.un n C u /
@vn
n dS D 0:
@n
The last equality follows from the fact that un D 0 and u is orthogonal to n on C .
Using (5.13) we have
Z
D.u/ij D.v/ij dx D
1
D
2
D.u/ij vi;j dx D
1
2
Z
ui;j vi;j dx C
uj;i vi;j dx
D.u/ij D.v/ij dx
for
u; v 2 V;
(5.17)
101
and
Z
hB.u; w/; vi D
.u r/w v dx
for
u; w; v 2 V;
f v dx
for
v 2 V:
for
u 2 V:
Proof. The assertion follows in a straightforward way from the definition of A and
the definition of the norm in V, cf. (5.9).
t
u
Lemma 5.4. For u; v; w 2 V we have
hB.u; w/; vi cB kukkwkkvk;
(5.18)
hB.u; v/; vi D 0;
(5.19)
(5.20)
102
Q We have
For the proof of (5.19), let u; v 2 V.
0
1
Z
Z
3
X
1
hB.u; v/; vi D
uj vi;j vi dx D
uj @
vi2 A dx
2
jD1
D
1
2
uj;j
3
X
;j
!
vi2
iD1
dx C
1
2
Z
@
uj nj
3
X
vi2 dS D 0;
iD1
where the last equality follows from the fact that div u D 0 in and un D u n D 0
on @. Now as VQ is dense in V, for u; v 2 V we can construct sequences um ; vm 2 VQ
such that kv vm k ! 0 and ku um k ! 0 as m ! 1. Hence
hB.u; v/; vi D hB.u um C um ; v vm C vm /; v vm C vm i
D hB.u um ; v/; vi C hB.um ; v vm /; vi
C hB.um ; vm /; v vm i C hB.um ; vm /; vm i:
We use the fact that hB.um ; vm /; vm i D 0 and (5.18) to get
jhB.u; v/; vij cB .ku um kkvk2 C kv vm kkum k.kvk C kvm k//:
The sequences um ; vm are bounded in V as they converge in this space, and the
sequences ku um k and kv vm k converge to zero, whence the assertion is proved.
Finally, (5.20) is a straightforward consequence of (5.19). For the proof it suffices
to substitute v C w in place of v in (5.19).
t
u
Lemma 5.5. The mapping V 2 3 .w; u/ ! B.w; u/ 2 V 0 is sequentially weakly
continuous, i.e.
wk ! w
and
uk ! u
weakly in V
) hB.wk ; uk /; vi ! hB.w; u/; vi
(5.21)
for all
v 2 V:
(5.22)
5.4 Existence of Weak Solutions for the Case of Linear Growth Condition
103
(5.23)
m!1 k!1
m!1 k!1
t
u
S D .; w/ 2 W V W kkW
(5.24)
(5.25)
Lemma 5.6. For a given .; w/ 2 W V the auxiliary Problem 5.3 has exactly one
solution u 2 V.
Proof. Define the mapping M W V ! V 0 by M.u/ D Au C B.w; u/. Obviously
this mapping is linear. By Lemma 5.3 and (5.18), M is bounded, and hence also
continuous. Moreover, by Lemma 5.3 and (5.13)
hMu; ui D hAu; ui D 2kuk2 ;
104
(5.26)
k k
kFkV 0
kkW C
:
2
2
t
u
5.4 Existence of Weak Solutions for the Case of Linear Growth Condition
105
WV
t
u
by the formula
k k
kFkV 0
kkW C
:
2
2
(5.27)
(5.28)
As .; w/ 2 S, we can use the bounds given in the definition (5.24). The
estimate (5.27) implies that
kuk
We have proved that u and satisfy the estimates given in definition (5.24) of the
set S, whence .; u/ 2 S. The proof of the first assertion is complete.
106
For the proof of the second assertion assume that .; u/ 2 .; u/. We must
show that .; u/ 2 S, i.e., .; u/ satisfy the bounds given in definition (5.24). By
Lemma 5.7 and the growth condition .H3/ in Lemma 5.1 we have
kuk
k k
kFkV 0
kkW C
; kkW kc1 kL2 .C / C c2 k kkuk:
2
2
A straightforward calculation proves that .; u/ satisfy the bounds given in the
definition (5.24), whereas indeed .; u/ 2 S. The proof is complete.
u
t
The space W V endowed with the .W; weak/ .V; weak/ topology is a locally
convex Hausdorff topological vector space, and the set S is nonempty, compact, and
convex in this space. Assuming .h1/.h4/, the values of are nonempty and convex
(see .H1/ of Lemma 5.1).
Lemma 5.10. Assume .h1/.h5/. Then the graph of is sequentially closed in
.W; weak/ .V; weak/ .W; weak/ .V; weak/.
Proof. Let k ! weakly in W and wk ! w weakly in V. Let moreover .k ; uk / be
such that k ! weakly in W, uk ! u weakly in V and .k ; uk / 2 .k ; wk /. The
last assertion means that k 2 H.wk / and uk 2 1 .k ; wk /. Lemma 5.8 implies that
u 2 1 .; w/. Since the trace operator W V ! W is compact, we have wk ! w
strongly in W. It remains to use .H2/ of Lemma 5.1 to conclude that 2 H.w /,
whence .; u/ 2 .; w/. The proof is complete.
t
u
Lemma 5.11. Assume .h1/.h5/. Then the graph of jS is a closed set in topology
.W; weak/ .V; weak/ .W; weak/ .V; weak/.
Proof. Lemma 5.10 implies that the graph of jS is sequentially closed in topology
.W; weak/ .V; weak/ .W; weak/ .V; weak/. The graph of jS is contained
in S S, a set which is compact, and, by the Eberleinmulyan theorem also
sequentially compact in .W; weak/ .V; weak/ .W; weak/ .V; weak/ topology.
Thus the graph of jS must be sequentially compact, and by the Eberleinmulyan
theorem, it is also compact and hence closed.
t
u
We have all the ingredients to prove that main theorem of this section.
Proof (of Theorem 5.1). The assertion of the theorem is a straightforward application of the KakutaniFanGlicksberg fixed point theorem and Lemmata 5.9
and 5.11.
t
u
5.5 Existence of Weak Solutions for the Case of Power Growth Condition
107
(5.29)
The main result of this section is the following existence theorem for the above
problem.
Theorem 5.2. Assume .h1/.h3/ and .h6/, .h7/. Then Problem 5.4 has a solution
.; u/ 2 W V.
Proof. The proof consists of two steps. In the first step we will define the cut-off
friction multifunction hm and the associated cut-off Problem 5.5. In the second step
we pass to infinity with the cut-off constant and we recover the solution of the
original problem.
Step 1. Let us first choose a natural number m and define
8
<h.x; s/
if jsj m;
hm .x; s/ D
ms
:h x; jsj
if jsj > m:
We will show that hm satisfies .h1/.h5/. Naturally, hm satisfies .h1/ and .h2/. We
will prove that hm satisfies .h3/, i.e., the graph of s ! hm .x; s/ is closed in R6 for
a.e. x 2 C . To this end, let sk ! s and k ! with k 2 hm .x; sk /. Define
(
sk
if jsk j m;
rk D ms
k
if jsk j > m:
jsk j
From the fact that k 2 hm .x; sk / and the definition of hm it follows that k 2 h.x; rk /.
We will consider two cases. If jsj m, then we have rk ! s and we use .h3/ for
h whence it follows that 2 h.x; s/ D hm .x; s/ for a.e. x 2 C . In the second case
and we can use .h3/ for h to deduce
we have jsj > m. Then we have rk ! ms
jsj
ms
that 2 h x; jsj D hm .x; s/ for a.e. x 2 C . The proof that hm satisfies .h3/
is complete. We will now demonstrate that hm satisfies .h4/ and .h5/. Indeed, let
s 2 R3 and 2 hm .x; s/. By the definition of hm and .h6/ for a.e. x 2 C we have
jj c3 .x/ C c4 mp1 , whence .h4/ holds with c1 D c3 ./ C c4 mp1 2 L2 .C / and
c2 D 0, which implies that hm satisfies also .h5/.
108
We have proved that hm satisfies .h1/.h5/. We can define the multivalued operator
Hm W W ! 2W by the formula
Hm .u/ D f 2 W W .x/ 2 hm .x; u.x//
a.e. on
C g:
We formulate the following cut-off version of Problem 5.4, where the cut-off
parameter is denoted by m.
Problem 5.5. Find um 2 V and m 2 Hm .um / such that for every v 2 V we have
hAum C B.um ; um /; vi C .m ; v /W D hF; vi:
(5.30)
As hm satisfies .h1/.h5/ we can use Theorem 5.1 to deduce that for each m there
exists .m ; um / 2 W V, a solution of Problem 5.5.
Step 2. We pass with the cut-off constant m to infinity and we recover the solution
of Problem 5.4. Taking v D um in (5.30) we get
2kum k2 C .m ; um /W kFkV 0 kum k:
(5.31)
Z
D
fjum jmg
m um dS C
fjum j>mg
fjum jmg
d1 jum j C d2 dS
jum j
mum
m
dS
m
jum j
fjum j>mg
jum j
.d1 m2 C d2 / dS
m
1
kd2 kL2 .C / kum kW :
m
1
k kkd2 kL2 .C / kum k:
m
It follows that the sequence um is bounded in V and thus, for a subsequence, denoted
by the same index, um ! u weakly in V. From the fact that p 2 2; 4/ it follows that
the trace operator p W V ! U is compact (see, for example, Theorem 2.79 in [50])
and um ! u strongly in U.
Using .h6/ we estimate
Z
q
km kU0
fjum jmg
.c3 C jum j
/ dS C
p1 q
C
fjum j>mg
!q
mum p1
dS
c3 C
jum j
109
Since c3 2 L2 .C / Lq .C / and the sequence um which converges in U strongly
is norm bounded in this space, it follows that m is bounded in U 0 and hence, for a
subsequence, not renumbered, m ! weakly in U 0 . We can rewrite (5.30) as
hAum C B.um ; um /; vi C hm ; v iU0 U D hF; vi;
and we can pass to the limit to obtain (5.29). We only need to show that 2 G.u /.
Since um ! u strongly in U, then, for a subsequence, denoted by the same index,
um .x/ ! u .x/ with jum .x/j g.x/ for a.e. x 2 C , where g 2 Lp .C /. Fix " > 0.
By the Luzin theorem there exists a closed set M" C , with m2 .C n M" / < " and
g continuous on M" . Define m" D maxx2M" g.x/. For all natural m m" we have
jum .x/j g.x/ m" m a.e. on M" and hence m .x/ 2 h.x; um .x// a.e. on M" . We
can use .H2/ of Theorem 3.23 for the space Z D Lp .M" /3 and the map
Z 3 u ! f 2 Z 0 W .x/ 2 h.x; u.x//
a.e. on
M" g 2 2Z
110
Fig. 5.2 Two examples of a frictional contact condition. The vertical line in both plots represents
the stick effect, where the tangential velocity of the fluid u is equal to the given velocity U0 . In
such a case the friction condition is actually a (nonhomogeneous) Dirichlet condition. If the stick
does not occur, i.e., u U0 we have a slip effect. In such a case, the tangential stress T is given
as a function of u . The right plot depicts the possibility of taking into account the dependence of
the friction coefficient of the slip rate. It is a priori unknown which part of the contact boundary
is a stick zone, and which part is the slip zone. Of course, in the case of evolution problems, both
zones can change with time
In this chapter we study a typical problem from the theory of lubrication, namely, the
Stokes flow in a thin three-dimensional domain " , " > 0. We assume the Fourier
boundary condition (only the friction part) at the top surface and a nonlinear Tresca
interface condition at the bottom one.
When " ! 0 the domains " become in the limit a two-dimensional domain !,
the mutual bottom of the domains " . Let .u" ; p" / be the solution of the considered
Stokes problem in " . An important problem in the theory of lubrication, which
deals with flows in thin films, is to describe the behavior of solutions .u" ; p" / as
" ! 0 in terms of some limit functions .u? ; p? /. It happens that the pressure p?
depends only on two variables which define the surface ! and satisfies the Reynolds
equation, a fundamental equation in this theory. We can say that the Reynolds
equation describes a distribution of the pressure in an infinitely thin domain.
Moreover, the boundary conditions imposed on the solutions of the Stokes equation
in " tend in an appropriate sense to some boundary conditions for the Reynolds
equation. Our aim is to provide a strict mathematical analysis of this asymptotic
problem.
";
(6.1)
div u D 0 in
";
(6.2)
111
112
The domain " is as follows. Let ! R2 be an open bounded set with sufficiently
smooth boundary. Then
" D f.x1 ; x2 ; x3 / 2 R3 W
.x1 ; x2 / 2 !;
The boundary of " consists of three parts: the bottom !, the lateral part L" , and
the top surface F" , @ " D ! [ L" [ F" . Our boundary conditions are:
At the bottom ! we assume
un D u n D 0
!:
on
(6.3)
(6.4)
where j:j denotes the Euclidean norm in R2 , and s is the velocity of the lower
surface !, n D .n1 ; n2 ; n3 / is the outward unit normal to " , and
un D u n;
u D u un n:
on
L" :
(6.5)
F" ;
(6.6)
and
unD0
on
F" ;
F"
given by
(6.7)
113
We assume that G" 2 .H 1 . " //3 with div G" D 0 in " , G" n D 0 on F" [ !.
We assume also that h satisfies
0 < h.x/ hM ;
h 2 C2 .!/;
(6.8)
and that l" > 0. In (6.4) and (6.6) T is the tangential part of the stress vector Tn on
the boundary @ " , where the stress tensor T is given by
Tij D p ij C 2Dij .u/
where
Dij .u/ D
1
2
@uj
@ui
C
@xj
@xi
for
1 i; j 3;
namely
T D Tn Tn n;
(6.9)
where Tn D .Tn/ n is the normal part of the stress tensor on the boundary @ " .
Remark 6.1. In [15, 21] a similar problem was considered, it differed from the
above in a boundary condition at the top surface; namely, in these papers it was
assumed that
u D 0 at
F" :
(6.10)
Condition (6.10) helps much in obtaining the solution. With (6.6) and (6.7) in
place of (6.10) the problem is more difficult due to the lack of the usual forms
of the Poincar and Korn inequalities. What is important is to obtain other forms of
these inequalities, in which the constants do not explode as " tends to zero.
The plan of the rest of the chapter is as follows. In Sect. 6.2 we provide a
weak formulation of the problem, prove suitable forms of the Korn and Poincar
inequalities, and obtain key estimates. In Sect. 6.3, taking into account a small
parameter, we introduce a scaling, and using estimates from Sect. 6.2 prove a
convergence theorem for the rescaled functions. In Sect. 6.4 we establish the limit
variational inequality, give precise characterization of the sets to which its solution
114
and admissible test functions belong, and prove the strong convergence of the
velocity fields. In Sect. 6.5 the Reynolds equation and the limit boundary conditions
are obtained. In the last section we prove the uniqueness of solutions of the limit
problem.
' G" D 0 on
L" ;
'nD0
on F" [ !g;
(6.11)
where
G" 2 .H 1 . " //3
";
G" n D 0
on
1" [ !;
(6.12)
div v D 0 in " g;
Kd D fv 2 K W
and
L02 . " /
"
D fp 2 L . / W
"
p dx dx3 D 0g:
Z
a.u; ' u/
"
Z
C
(6.13)
L02 . " /;
Z
F"
l" u.' u/ dS
(6.14)
where
Z
a.u; v/ D 2
"
(6.15)
115
Remark 6.2. In (6.14), k" comes from the Tresca condition. It is a positive constant
and its dependence on " shall be defined in Sect. 6.3.
Observe that from condition (6.13) it follows that:
u D G"
unD0
on
L"
on
F" [ !
.cf: (6.5)/;
.cf: (6.3)
and
(6.7)/:
Tresca and slip conditions are included in (6.14). To obtain (6.14) we observe that
ui C p;i D 2.ui;j C uj;i / C pij ;j Tij;j ;
as uj;ij D .uj;j /;i D 0 from div u D 0.
We multiply the equations of motion
Tij;j D 0
.i D 1; 2; 3/
@.'i ui /
Tij
dx dx3
@xj
"
Z
@ "
Tn .' u/ dS D 0:
(6.16)
Now
Z
"
Tij
@.'i ui /
dx dx3 D
@xj
Z
"
since
Tij Dij .v/ D
1
1
1
Tij .vi;j C vj;i / D Tij vi;j C Tji vj;i D Tij vi;j
2
2
2
by symmetry.
From (6.16) and (6.15),
Z
"
Tij
@.'i ui /
dx dx3 D
@xj
Z
"
D a.u; ' u/
Z
D a.u; ' u/
as div u D 0 in " .
"
"
(6.17)
116
The second term in (6.16) is divided into three parts, as @ " D F" [ ! [ L" :
We have, by (6.9) and (6.6),
Z
Z
T C Tn n ..' u/ C .' u/n n/ dS
Tij nj .'i ui / dS D
F"
Z
D
Dl
"
F"
F"
F"
(6.18)
where
s D .s1 ; s2 ; 0/ D G" j! :
(6.19)
"
"
C k"
Z
F"
u.' u/ dS
(6.20)
.j' sj ju sj/ dx 0:
Remark 6.3. Observe that in a.:; :/ there is the Newtonian viscosity . In the sequel
we set D 1.
We use (6.20) to obtain the basic estimate of the velocity given in Lemma 6.4
below.
Lemma 6.1. We have
Z
Z
Z
Z
1
l"
l"
a.u; u/ C
juj2 dS C k" ju sj dx
jG" j2 dS C 2
jrG" j2 dx dx3 :
"
"
2
2 F"
2
!
F
(6.21)
117
Z
F"
juj2 dS C k"
Z
!
Z
F"
uG" dS;
(6.22)
"
a.u; G / D 2
Z
2
"
"
Z
"
"
1
1
a.u; u/ C 2a.G" ; G" / a.u; u/ C 2
2
2
Z
"
The desired estimate of the velocity will follow from (6.21) and a form of the Korn
inequality, suitable for our problem.
Lemma 6.2 (A Form of the Korn Inequality). We have
Z
Z
jr.u G" /j2 dx dx3 a.u G" ; u G" / C C.F" /
"
F"
ju G" j2 dS;
(6.24)
where
C.F" / D 2kD2 h" kC.!/ 1 C kD1 h" k2C.!/ :
(6.25)
Observe that we use here h 2 C2 .!/, cf. (6.8), and that C.F" / is of order " if h" D "h
as in (6.7).
Proof. Assume that v D u G" is a smooth function. The result will follow from
density of smooth functions in Kd . We have
a.v; v/ D
1
2
Z
Z
"
@vi
@vk
C
@xk
@xi
2
dx dx3
@vi @vi
@vi @vk
dx dx3
D
C
@xk @xk
@xk @xi
"
Z
Z
@vi @vk
2
D
jrvj dx dx3 C
dx dx3
"
"
@x
k @xi
118
Z
D
Z
D
Z
"
"
jrvj dx dx3
jrvj2 dx dx3 C
@ "
@vi
vk nk dS C
@xi
"
@2 vi
vk dx dx3 C
@xk @xi
"
@vi @vk
dx dx3
@xi @xk
@ "
@vi
vk ni dS:
@xk
Z
Z
@ "
@vi
vk nk dS
@xi
Z
@ "
Z
@ "
@vi
vk ni dS
@xk
@vi
vk ni dS:
@xk
(6.26)
For v D uG" we have .uG" /n D 0 on @ " as u 2 Kd and G" is as in (6.12) thus
the first surface integral on the right-hand side equals zero, and the second surface
integral reduces to that over F" [ !; as v D u G" D 0 on L" . We have to estimate
the integral
Z
F" [!
@.ui G"i /
.uk G"k /ni dS D
@xk
iD1
@xk
F" [!
.uk G"k /
@.uG" /n
@xk
ni D
3
X
@.ui G"i /
ni dS:
@xk
(6.27)
D 0, i.e.,
(6.28)
iD1
"
G
/
@.u
i
Q "
i
"
ni dS C.F /
ju G" j2 dS;
.uk Gk /
F"
@xk
F"
(6.29)
where
Q F" / 2 max jni;k .q/j:
C.
"
q2F
(6.30)
119
We compute
n3;i .x1 ; x2 / D
@n3
3
.x1 ; x2 / D .1 C jrh" j2 / 2
@xi
@h" @2 h"
@h" @2 h"
C
@x1 @xi @x1
@x2 @xi @x2
;
whence
@n3
"
"
"
" 2
" 2
F"
ju G j dS
2C.F" /
Z
F"
juj dS C
" 2
1"
jG j dS ;
(6.31)
and, by (6.23),
a.u G" ; u G" / D a.u; u/ C a.G" ; G" / 2a.u; G" /
Z
2a.u; u/ C 5
jrG" j2 dx dx3 :
(6.32)
"
Moreover
Z
Z
jruj2 dx dx3 2
"
"
Z
"
jrG" j2 dx dx3 :
(6.33)
"
jrG" j2 dx dx3
4C.F" /
F"
juj dS C
(6.34)
!
" 2
F"
jG j dS :
The first term on the right-hand side as well as the surface integral
estimated in (6.21). From (6.21) and (6.34) we have
F"
juj2 dS is
120
Lemma 6.4.
Z
Z
16C.F" /
jruj dx dx3 28 C
jrG" j2 dx dx3
l"
"
"
Z
C 4 l" C 2C.F" /
jG" j2 dS:
2
(6.35)
F"
Remark 6.4. If we set "l" D Ol 2 .0; 1/, then l" ! 1 as " ! 0, and
16C.F" /
D O.1/ as " ! 0;
l"
1
"
"
as " ! 0:
4.l C 2C.F // D O
"
28 C
R
Later on we shall show that " " jruj2 dx dx3 D O.1/ as " ! 0. This will come
from estimates of the integrals on the right-hand side of (6.35), by means of the
H 1 ./3 norm of a given function GO in H 1 ./3 , to which the family of functions G"
is suitably related (here andRin the sequel we put D 1 ).
To be able to estimate juj2 dx dy we need a suitable form of the Poincar
inequality.
Lemma 6.5 (A Form of the Poincar Inequality). Set h"M D max! jh" .x1 ; x2 /j:
Then
Z
"
Z
F"
@u 2
dx dx3 :
" @x3
juj2 dS C 2.h"M /2
(6.36)
h" .x/
t
@u
.x; z/ dz;
@z
so that
"
"
h" .x/
0
@u
.x; z/ dz:
@z
h" .x/
"
"
"
Z
0
h" .x/
2
@u
.x; x3 / dx3 ;
@z
t
u
121
We have now all basic estimates. In Sect. 6.3 we shall state them once again but
in new variables: uO instead of u" , etc., defined in 1 .
We have the following existence theorem in " .
Theorem 6.1. For the data as in Sects. 6.1 and 6.2, there exists a unique weak
solution .u; p/ D .u" ; p" / of problem (6.1)(6.7),
u" 2 Kd
and
Proof. For the proof, which requires some more advanced variational methods to
be presented in this place, we refer the reader to [15] where the functional j is here
given by
Z
j.'/ D
!
Z
F"
u' dS:
t
u
x3
;
"
uO i .x; y/ D ui .x; x3 /;
i D 1; 2
and
uO 3 .x; y/ D
1
u3 .x; x3 /;
"
uO .x; y/ D .Ou1 .x; y/; uO 2 .x; y/; uO 3 .x; y// being a new velocity in .
For the pressure p in " we define pO .x; y/ D "2 p.x; x3 /: Let
Ol D "l"
and
kO D "k" ;
where Ol and kO are some positive numbers, l" stands in (6.6), and k" appears in the
Tresca condition (6.4).
O y/ D .GO 1 .x; y/; GO 2 .x; y/; GO 3 .x; y// in H 1 ./3 such
Now, for a given function G.x;
O
that G n D 0 on F [ ! .F D F1 / and
@GO 1
@GO 2
@GO 3
D 0 .div GO D 0/;
C
C
@x1
@x2
@y
we define a family of functions G" in " , by
GO i .x; y/ D G"i .x; x3 /;
i D 1; 2;
1
GO 3 .x; y/ D G"3 .x; x3 /:
"
122
' GO D 0 on
L ;
' n D 0 on
o
F [ ! ;
u 2 Kd
To compare solutions .u" ; p" / for various " (these solutions exist by Theorem 6.1) we
transform them as above to the same domain . The transformed solutions .Ou" ; pO " /
are solutions of a suitably transformed problem from Definition 6.1. We shall write
the problem precisely later on.
Now, we obtain estimates for uO D uO " directly from those obtained for u D u" in
Sect. 6.2.
We shall write estimates (6.35) and (6.36) in new variables.
Lemma 6.6. We have
Z
Z
1
" 2
O 2 dx dy for all
jrG j dx dx3
jr Gj
"
"
(6.37)
for all
(6.38)
jG"i j2
Z
dS D
Z
!
p
jGi .x; h" .x//j2 1 C jrh" .x/j2 dx
Z
p
jGO i .x; h.x//j2 1 C jrh" .x/j2 dx D
F
123
jG"3 j2 dS D
Z
!
p
jG"3 .x; h" .x//j2 1 C jrh" .x/j2 dx
p
p
1 C jrh" .x/j2
2
2
O
"
jG3 .x; h.x//j 1 C jrh.x/j p
dx
1 C jrh.x/j2
!
Z
p
2
"
2
" max 1 C jrh .x/j
jGO 3 j2 dS:
(6.40)
2
x2!
F
jG" j2 dS
O 2 dS:
jGj
(6.41)
F
As
Z
F
O 2 dS C0 ./
jGj
Z
O 2 C jr Gj
O 2 dx dy;
jGj
(6.42)
t
u
Using inequalities (6.37) and (6.38) in (6.35) and taking into account Remark 6.4
we see that
Z
Z
2
O 2 C jr Gj
O
O 2 dx dy CQ 0 for all " 2 .0; 1:
"
jGj
jruj dx dx3 C.; h; l/
"
(6.43)
2
X
@Oui 2
@x 2
i;jD1
L ./
2
X
@Oui 2
@y 2
iD1
2
X
@Ou3 2
@Ou3 2
4
C "2
C
"
CQ 0 ;
@y 2
@x 2
i L ./
L ./
./
iD1
(6.44)
@Op
"C2 :
@y 1
H ./
and
Z
"
p" div
(6.45)
dx dx3 D 0:
124
2
@Oui
dx dy
@y
F
for
i D 1; 2; 3:
(6.46)
Observe that changing the variables, we obtain the same form of the Poincar
inequality.
Exercise 6.3. Prove (6.46).
To estimate the integrals on the left-hand side, we have to estimate the surface
integrals on the right-hand side. We have,
Z
F
jOui j dS D
p
jOui .x; h.x//j2 1 C jrh.x/j2 dx
p
p
1 C jrh.x/j2
D
jOui .x; h .x//j 1 C jrh" .x/j2 p
dx
1 C jrh" .x/j2
!
Z
p
max 1 C jrh.x/j2
jui j2 dS for i D 1; 2;
(6.47)
Z
"
F"
x2!
and
Z
F
jOu3 j dS D
p
jOu3 .x; h.x//j2 1 C jrh.x/j2 dx
p
1
max 1 C jrh.x/j2
2
" x2!
Z
F"
ju3 j2 dS:
(6.48)
juj2 dS
Z
F"
jG" j2 dS C
C0 ./
4
l3
Z
"
jrG" j2 dx dx3
O 2 C jr Gj
O 2 / dx dy C
.jGj
O
C.; Ol; G/:
4
Ol
O 2 dx dy
jr Gj
(6.49)
Thus, from the Poincar inequality (6.46) with (6.44) and (6.47)(6.49) we obtain
in the end
kOui k2L2 ./ C3 ;
(6.50)
(6.51)
6.4 Limit Variational Inequality, Strong Convergence, and the Limit Equation
125
Let
@v
2 L2 ./
Vy D v 2 L ./ W
@y
2
kvk2L2 ./
! 12
2
@v
C
:
@y L2 ./
Theorem 6.2. There exist u?i 2 Vy for i D 1; 2, p? 2 L02 ./, and a subsequence
" ! 0 such that
uO i ! u?i
"
weakly in Vy
for i D 1; 2;
@Oui
! 0 weakly in L2 ./
@xj
"
@Ou3
! 0 weakly in L2 ./;
@y
"2
@Ou3
! 0 weakly in L2 ./
@xi
pO ! p?
weakly in L2 ./;
for
i; j D 1; 2;
(6.52)
(6.53)
(6.54)
for
i D 1; 2;
p? depends only on x;
(6.55)
(6.56)
(6.57)
Proof. From (6.44) and (6.50) we have (6.52), and from (6.44) and (6.52) we
P
@Ou
get (6.53). By (6.53) and 2jD1 @xjj D @O@yu3 , (6.54) holds. From (6.51) and (6.44)
we deduce (6.55). From (6.45) we obtain (6.56), and from (6.51), div uO D 0, and a
suitable choice of the test function we obtain also (6.57).
t
u
126
2
1X
2 i;jD1
2 Z
1X
@Oui
@
u3
2 @O
2 @
C
C"
.'Oi uO i / C "
.'O3 uO 3 / dxdy
2 iD1 @y
@xi
@y
@xi
Z
Z
@'O1
@Ou3 @
@'O2
@'O3
C2
" .'O3 uO 3 /dxdy
dxdy
"
pO
C
C
@y @y
@x1
@x2
@y
2 Z
X
p
OlOui .x; h.x//'Oi .x; h.x// uO i .x; h.x// 1 C jrh" .x/j2 dx
C
!
iD1
Z
C
(6.58)
If we take all nonlinear terms in (6.58) to the right-hand side and take lim inf"!0
on both sides (in fact on the left-hand side the simple lim"!0 exists), we obtain the
limit variational inequality,
2
X
iD1
Z
@u?i @.'Oi u?i /
@'O1
@'O2
dxdy
dxdy
p? .x/
C
@y
@x1
@x2
@y
Z
@h
@h
?
p .x/ 'O1 .x; h.x//
.x/ C 'O2 .x; h.x//
.x/ dx
@x1
@x2
!
Z
2
X
Ol u?i .x; h.x// 'Oi .x; h.x// u?i .x; h.x// dx
C
1
2
iD1
Z
C
(6.59)
6.4 Limit Variational Inequality, Strong Convergence, and the Limit Equation
127
@'O3
p .x/
dydx D
@y
Z Z
!
h.x/
@'O3
p .x/
dydx D
@y
?
Z
!
p
@h
@h
1
.'O1 n1 C 'O2 n2 / D 1 C jrh.x/j2 .'O1 n1 C 'O2 n2 / D 'O1
C 'O2
;
n3
@x1
@x2
@'O3
dydx D
p? .x/
@y
!
@h
p? .x/
'Oi .x; h.x// .x/ dx:
@xi
!
iD1
2
X
Z
F"
u2 dS D O
1
;
"
jOui j2 dS C.h/
F
F
jOu3 j2 dS
Z
F"
1
C.h/
"2
jui j2 dS
Z
F"
for
i D 1; 2;
ju3 j2 dS;
Z
and
F
jOu3 j2 dS
1
O
C.h/C.; Ol; G/:
"2
(6.60)
D Ol
Z
!
p
1 C jrh" .x/j2 dx;
Z
!
u?i .x; h.x// 'Oi .x; h.x// u?i .x; h.x// dx
p
1 C jrh" .x/j2 ! 1 strongly in L2 .!/
128
The third component (for i D 3) is nonpositive in the limit and we can omit it.
In fact,
Z
Z
"
O
"l
u3 .'3 u3 /dS l
u3 '3 dS
F"
D Ol
D Ol
Z
Z
F"
p
u3 .x; h" .x//'3 .x; h" .x// 1 C jrh" .x/j2 dx
p
"Ou3 .x; h.x//"'O3 .x; h.x// 1 C jrh" .x/j2 dx;
L2 .!/;
so that
lim Ol
"!0
F"
u3 .'3 u3 / dS 0:
on
there exists
L ;
'O3 2 H 1 ./
'O n D 0
on
such that
F [ !g:
(6.61)
129
'O1 D 'O2 D 0
on L g:
@h
@h
.x/ C 'O2 .x; h.x//
.x/ D 'O3 .x; h.x//
@x1
@x2
2 H 1 ./ such that
on
@h
@h
.x/ C 'O2 .x; h.x//
.x/ D
@x1
@x2
F :
D 0 on L [ !,
on F :
on
on
L [ !;
F ;
D0
in ;
on @:
O D 0 .K/,
O and we characterized 0 .K/
O in terms of the
This proves that 0 .K/
O D
functions 'O1 and 'O2 only (and not 'O3 the third component). Since .K/
O C G,
N we have
0 .K/
N on
O D f'N D .'O1 ; 'O2 / 2 .H 1 .//2 W 'N D G
.K/
L g:
'O1 .x; y/
.x/ C 'O2 .x; y/
.x/ dxdy D 0 for all
@x1
@x2
2 C01 .!/:
(6.62)
130
Then
@'O1
@'O2
@'O3
p .x/
C
C
@x1
@x2
@y
dxdy D 0;
which is equivalent to
Z
@'O1
@'O2
dxdy
p? .x/
C
@x1
@x2
Z
@h
@h
?
C p .x/ 'O1 .x; h.x//
dx D 0:
C 'O2 .x; h.x//
@x1
@x2
!
(6.63)
(6.64)
Proof. Let
m 2 C01 .!/,
m ! p? in L2 .!/. Then
Z
@'O1
@'O2
@'O3
dxdy
m .x/
C
C
@x1
@x2
@y
!
Z
Z
3
X
@
m
@
m
D
'O1
dxdy C
C 'O2
m .x/
'Oi ni dS;
@x1
@x2
@
iD1
as @
@ym D 0: Now, the surface integral equals zero since
m 2 C01 .!/ and 'O n D 0
on F [ !. The first integral on the right-hand side equals zero by condition (D).
Thus, the integral on the left-hand side equals zero. We pass to the limit
m ! p? in
L2 .!/ to get (6.63). As
Z
Z
Z h.x/
@'O3
@'O3
?
?
.x; y/ dxdy D
.x; y/ dy dx
p .x/
p .x/
@y
@y
0
!
!
Z
Z
2
X
@h
?
?
D
p .x/'O3 .x; h.x//dx D
p .x/
'Oi .x; h.x//
dx;
@xi
!
!
iD1
we have the equivalence of (6.63) and (6.64).
t
u
The above lemma tells us that if in the limit variational inequality (6.59) we choose
a test function belonging to the set
O
FKO WD f'N 2 .K/
and
'N
(6.65)
131
Let
F WD fu? W u? is a weak limit of uO in the topology of Vy Vy g:
O in the topology of Vy Vy .
We prove that F is contained in the closure of .K/
This will allow us later to get useful conclusions from variational inequalities (6.59)
and (6.66), by taking test functions from F .
Lemma 6.9. Each solution u? of the limit variational inequality satisfies condition
.D0 /, and u? GO satisfies the following stronger condition (D)
Z
@
?
?
O
O
.u1 G1 /
.x/ C .u2 G2 /
.x/ dxdy D 0
@x1
@x2
for all
2 C1 .!/:
(6.67)
Z
0D
.x/
@Ou1
@Ou2
@Ou3
C
C
@x1
@x2
@y
Z
dxdy D
uO 1
C uO 2
@x1
@x2
dxdy
u?1
C u?2
@x1
@x2
dxdy D 0
for all
2 C01 .!/:
O n D 0 on F [ !
Taking uO GO instead of uO at the beginning of this proof, as .Ou G/
O
t
u
and uO G D 0 on L , we obtain (6.67) in the limit.
From Lemmas 6.8 and 6.9 it follows that condition (D) is the right one to get rid of
the pressure terms in the limit variational inequality. Note that in condition (D) we
do not assume that 'N 2 .H 1 .//2 , that is, (6.62) has sense for 'N 2 .L2 .//2 , for
example. The solution u? satisfies (D) and is not in .H 1 .//2 .
We shall characterize the set F of solutions u? .
n
@u?i
2 L2 ./; i D 1; 2;
F D u? D .u?1 ; u?2 / 2 .L2 .//2 W
@y
u? satisfies .D0 /;
o
u? satisfies condition .CF / coming from uO n D 0 on F :
(6.68)
Our main problem now is to find relations between FKO given by (6.65) and F given
by (6.68). We do not know what is the condition .CF / in (6.68) in the general case
(note that if F is given by y D const: we have no condition on u? coming from
uO n D 0 on F ). Thus we define
132
F1 D u D
.u?1 ; u?2 /
2 .L .//
@u?i
2
?
0
2 L ./; i D 1; 2; u satisfies .D / :
@y
(6.69)
and define
v.X; Y/ D v .x; h.x/y/ D v.x;
N y/
U.x; y/ D v.x;
N y/h.x/:
and
Then
v and U are of the same regularity,
v satisfies (D) or (D) in is equivalent to U satisfies (D) or (D) in u.
Indeed for all
2 C1 .!/ we have
Z
v.X; Y/r
.X/dXdY D
U.x; y/r
.x/dxdy;
u
v D 0 on L is equivalent to U D 0 on L ,
and also
If Un .x; y/ ! U.x; y/ in Vy .u/ Vy .u/, then vn .X; Y/ ! v.X; Y/ in Vy ./
Vy ./.
Indeed,
Z
Z
Z
D
Z
D
u
1
hmin
Z
u
1
dxdy
h.x/
1
dxdy
h.x/
133
and
2
Z
@vn
@v
dXdY
.X;
Y/
.X;
Y/
@Y
@Y
Z
@vN n
1
@vN
1 2
D
.x;
y/
.x;
y/
h.x/ dxdy
h.x/ @y
h.x/
u @y
2
Z
1
@vN n
@vN
D
h.x/ @y .x; y/ h.x/ @y .x; y/ h3 .x/ dxdy
u
2
Z
@Un
1
@U
3
.x; y/
.x; y/ dxdy:
@y
hmin u @y
Let U .x; y/ D U. x; y/, > 1,
Z
u
Then as .z/ D
2
U.x; y/r
.x/ dxdy D 0
z
for all
2 C1 .!/, we have
Z
Z
u
2 C1 .!/:
U .x; y/r
.x/dxdy D
Z
U. x; y/r
.x/dxdy D
z dzdy
U.z; y/r
D 0:
2
u
Thus, U satisfies condition (D). Since it is not smooth enough in x, we take the
O for
usual mollification " ? U with respect to x variable only which is in 0 .K/
small ", " ". /. We check condition (D).
Z
Z Z
u
Z Z
D
!
Z
D
Z
!
U .t; y/" .t x/dt r
.x/dydx
U .t; y/
Z
!
" .x t/r
.x/dx dydt
U .t; y/r." ?
/.t/dydt D 0:
As " ?
2 C1 .!/ and U satisfies condition (D), then " ?U also satisfies condition
.D/ in u. Now,
kU " ? U kVy2 kU U kVy2 C kU " ? U kVy2 ;
and we take close to 1 first and then small ".
O such that kU " ? U kV 2 .u/ ! 0, which is
Thus there exists " ? U 2 0 .K/
y
O with kv " ? v kV 2 ./ ! 0.
equivalent to the existence of " ? v 2 0 .K/
t
u
y
134
L ./
iD1
aO .Ou ';
O uO '/
O C C.F ; h/
F
jOu 'j
O 2 dS:
By (6.20),
aO .Ou ';
O uO '/
O D aO .';
O 'O uO / C aO .Ou; uO '/
O
Z
Z
O
O
aO .';
O 'O uO / C l
uO .'O uO / dS C k .j'O sj jOu sj/ dx;
F
and we have
2
X
@.Oui 'Oi / 2
2
@y
L ./
iD1
aO .';
O 'O uO / C Ol
C kO
Z
!
Z
F
uO .'O uO / dS
C C.F ; h/
F
jOu 'j
O 2 dS;
where
aO .';
O 'O uO / D
2 Z
@'Oj
1X
@'Oi
@
@
"
" .'Oi uO i / C " .'Oj uO j / dxdy
C"
2 i;jD1
@xj
@xi
@xj
@xi
2 Z
1X
@'Oi
@
@'O3
@
C "2
.'Oi uO i / C "2 .'O3 uO 3 / dxdy
2 iD1 @y
@xi
@y
@xi
Z
@'O3 @
" .'O3 uO 3 /dxdy:
C2
"
@y @y
Thus
2
X
@.Oui 'Oi / 2
2
@y
iD1
L ./
C kO
Z
!
aO .';
O 'O uO / C Ol
Z
F
uO .'O uO / dS C C.F ; h/
F
jOu 'j
O 2 dS:
135
O Then
Let uN D .Ou1 ; uO 2 /, u? D .u?1 ; u?2 / as in (6.52) and let 'N D .'O1 ; 'O2 / 2 .K/.
(
2
X
@.Oui 'Oi / 2
lim sup
2
@y
"!0
Z
!
L ./
iD1
C kO
@'N @.'N u? /
dxdy C Ol
@y
@y
Z
F
u? .'N u? / dS C C.F ; h/
Z
F
ju? 'j
N 2 dS;
and
2
X
@.Oui 'Oi / 2
2
@y
L ./
iD1
C kO
Z
Z
@'N @.'N u? /
dxdy C Ol
u? .'N u? / dS
@y
@y
F
Z
C C.F ; h/
ju? 'j
N 2 dS C for all < "./:
F
O which has u? as a
By Lemma 6.10, there exists a sequence of functions 'N in .K/
2
limit in Vy , whence
2
X
@.Oui 'Oi / 2
2
@y
iD1
C kO
Z
!
L ./
for all
< "./:
SinceR > 0 is arbitrary, then by the weak lower semicontinuity of the functional
v 7! ! jv sj dx, we get
Z
!
a:e: in ;
1 @2 u?i
@p?
C
D 0 .i D 1; 2/
2
2 @y
@xi
p? 2 H 1 .!/;
in
L2 ./:
(6.70)
(6.71)
136
Proof. Using Lemma 6.10 we first take 'O1 D u?1 1 with 1 2 H01 ./ and
'O2 D u?2 , and then 'O1 D u?1 and 'O2 D u?2 2 with 2 2 H01 ./ in (6.59), to get
1 @2 u?i
@p?
C
D 0 in
2 @y2
@xi
H 1 ./;
i D 1; 2:
(6.72)
2h.x/Qu?i .x/
.x/dx C
D
!
Z
C
!
h.x/u?i .x; 0/
.x/dx
where
h.x/Qu?i .x/
h.x/
D
0
and
Z
@ i
p .x/
dxdy D
@xi
Z
D
!
D
p .x/
p? .x/
1
6
Z
!
h.x/
0
@
@xi
p? .x/
!
@y2 yh.x/
.x/
dy dx
@xi
!
Z
.x/
h.x/
y2 yh.x/dy dx
@h3 .x/
.x/
dx:
@xi
Thus
h.x/Qu?i .x/ C
h.x/ ?
h.x/ ?
h3 .x/ @p?
ui .x; h.x// C
ui .x; 0/ D
.x/
2
2
6 @xi
(6.73)
137
Z
Z
h3 ? h ? h ?
?
rp s sh r'dx C sh rh'dx D
' gQ n dl
12
2
2
!
@!
(6.74)
and
Z
gQ .x/ D
h.x/
0
gO .x; y/dy
for all
x 2 @!:
Moreover, the traces ? D @u@y .; 0/, h? D @u@y .; h.x//, s?h D u? .; h.x//, and
s? D u? .; 0/ satisfy the following limit form of the Tresca boundary conditions (6.4)
and the Fourier boundary condition (6.6)
j ? j D kO H) 9 0 u? D s C ? o
a:e: in !;
j ? j < kO H) u? D s
h? rh n C Ols?h D 0
a:e: on
F :
(6.75)
(6.76)
y2 @p? .x/
C s?i .x/ C yi? .x/;
2 @xi
(6.77)
h2 ?
rp .x/ C s? .x/ C h ? .x/
2
a:e: in !:
y2
h2
hy C
2
2
@p? .x/
?
C s?h;i .x/ C .y h/h;i
.x/;
@xi
(6.78)
138
h2 ?
rp .x/ C s?h .x/ hh? .x/
2
a:e: in !:
(6.79)
1
v.x/
Q
D
h.x/
h.x/
0
v.x; y/ dy
of (6.77) we obtain
hQu?i .x/ D
h3 @p? .x/
h2
C hs?i .x/ C i? .x/:
6 @xi
2
Z
0D
Z
'.x/
Z
D
!
'.x/
2
X
@Oui
h
0
iD1
@Ou3
C
@xi
@y
2
X
@.huQO i /
@xi
iD1
!
dydx
!
@h
@h
C uO 2 .x; h.x//
;
@x1
@x2
and
Z
!
'.x/
2
X
@.huQO i /
iD1
@xi
@h
C uO i .x; h.x//
@xi
!
dx D 0:
2 Z
X
iD1
@'
huQO i dx C
@xi
!
2
X
@h
'.x/
uO i .x; h.x//
@xi
!
iD1
!
dx C
2 Z
X
iD1
@!
huQO i ni ' dl D 0:
huQO r'dx
!
Z
!
Z
'.x/ .Ou.x; h.x//rh/ dx D
@!
gQ .x/ n' dl
for all
' 2 H 1 .!/:
139
(6.80)
for all ' 2 H 1 .!/. Then using (6.78) and (6.80), we obtain the weak formulation (6.74) of the Reynolds equation.
To prove (6.75) we transform (6.59). Using the Green formula, (6.71), conditions
'i D gO i on L , ni D 0 on ! for i D 1; 2, and ' n D 0 on ! [ F , as well as the
O and of D./ in L2 ./, we obtain
density of D./ in .K/,
Z
O
k.j'.x;
0/ sj js? sj/ dx
!
Z
C
Z
C
!
Z
!
? .'.x; 0/ s? / dx
(6.81)
We take first
'.x; y/ D
s?h .x/
si .x/
if y D h.x/;
if y D 0;
then
'.x; y/ D
s?h .x/
2s?i si
if y D h.x/;
if y D 0;
in (6.81), to obtain
Z
O ? sj ? .s? s/ dx D 0;
kjs
(6.82)
s?h .x/
.x/ C s
if
if
y D h.x/;
y D 0;
(6.83)
(6.84)
140
We will show that j j kO a.e. on !. Suppose that there exists a set of positive
measure !1 ! such that j j > kO on this set. Taking D 0 on ! n !1 and D
on ! in (6.84) we get
Z
!1
j j.kO j j/ dx 0:
a:e: on
!:
Then
O ? sj j ? jjs? sj ? .s? s/ a:e: on
kjs
and
O ? sj ? .s? s/ 0 a:e: on
kjs
!:
a:e: on
!:
(6.85)
.x/
s? .x/
if y D h.x/
if y D 0
Then, taking D
C s?h and D
C s?h we obtain
Z
Ols?h C h? rh n
dx D 0 for all
!
2 .L2 .!//2 :
2 .L2 .!//2 ;
t
u
6.8 Uniqueness
141
Remark 6.5. From formula (6.74) we obtain the following form of the Reynolds
equation (for D 1),
div
h3 ? h ? h ?
rp s sh C s?h rh D 0
12
2
2
in H 1 .!/:
d
dx
h3 dp?
6 dx
C s?
dh
D 0:
dx
(6.86)
Observe how the Reynolds equation depends on the boundary conditions for the
velocity field. When 6D 1, the second term on the left-hand side of (6.86) should
be multiplied by .
6.8 Uniqueness
Theorem 6.5. There exists a unique solution .u? ; p? / in VQ y .L02 .!/ \ H 1 .!// of
inequality (6.59).
Proof. Let .U 1 ; p1 / and .U 2 ; p2 / be two solutions of (6.59). Taking ' D U 2 and
' D U 1 , respectively, as test functions in (6.59) we reduce it to (6.66) and obtain
1
2
Z
Z
@.U 1 U 2 / 2
dxdy C Ol jU 1 .x; h.x// U 2 .x; h.x//j2 dx 0:
@y
and
a:e: in !:
(6.87)
h3
r.p2 p1 /r'.x/dx
6
Z
D
h.x/U 1 .x; 0/ U 2 .x; 0/ C U 1 .x; h.x// U 2 .x; h.x//r'.x/dx
!
C
!
for all
' 2 H 1 .!/:
142
143
144
and
P p1 .Q/ W div u D 0g;
V D fu D .u1 ; u2 / 2 H
(cf. Sect. 3.4) with the scalar products
Z
Z
u.x/ v.x/ dx
.u; v/ D
in H;
..u; v// D
ru.x/ W rv.x/ dx
in V;
kukH D juj D
and
sZ
jru.x/j2 dx;
kukV D kuk D
respectively. The duality between V and its dual V 0 is denoted by h; i.
The weak formulation of the initial boundary value problem for the Navier
Stokes equations is given in Theorem 7.1 below. We adopt the notation from
Chap. 4. In particular, the Stokes operator A and the trilinear form b as well as
the associated nonlinear operator B are defined in this chapter the same as in
Chap. 4 (with the obvious difference that in Chap. 4 the stationary problem is threedimensional and in present chapter we consider the two-dimensional problem).
Our aim is to prove the following existence and uniqueness result.
P Then there exists a unique function u W 0; 1/ ! H
Theorem 7.1. Let u0 ; f 2 H.
such that
u 2 C.0; TI H/ \ L2 .0; TI V/;
u.0/ D u0 ;
for all
v 2 V;
(7.1)
145
P
P
Problem 7.1. Let n 2 N, fn .x/ D njD1 fOj !j .x/, un .0/ D u0n D njD1 .u0 ; !j /!j .x/.
On the interval .0; 1/ find un .t/ D un .; t/ of the form
un .x; t/ D
n
X
jD1
such that
d
.un .t/; !j / C ..un .t/; !j // C b.un .t/; un .t/; !j / D .fn ; !j /
dt
un .0/ D u0n :
for j D 1; : : : ; n;
(7.2)
Observe that (7.2) is a system of n ordinary differential equations for the vector
functions
t ! .un1 .t/; : : : ; unn .t//
with initial condition ..u0 ; !1 /; : : : ; .u0 ; !n //. From the classical theorem about
existence and uniqueness of solutions of the system
xP D F.x/;
x.0/ D x0 ;
(7.3)
d
jun .t/j2 C k1 ./jun .t/j2 C./jfn j2 :
dt
(7.4)
and
146
t
0
Hence, for each t > 0, jun .t/j < 1 and thus the local solution can be extended to
the whole positive semiaxis. From this inequality we can see that for each T > 0
our approximate solutions are uniformly bounded in the space
C.0; TI H/ \ L2 .0; TI V/:
Moreover, the approximate solutions are infinitely differentiable functions in x
and in t.
Exercise 7.1. Prove that if f D 0 then any approximate solution, that is, solution
starting from an arbitrary initial data u0 2 H, converges at least exponentially fast
to zero in H.
To get the boundedness in H of our approximate solutions we shall use the Gronwall
inequality (cf. Lemma 3.20). In our case, from the Gronwall inequality applied
to (7.4), we have
2
2 k1 t
C
0
C./ 2
jfn j .1 ek1 t /:
k1
(7.5)
Z
un .x; t/'.x; t/dxdt D
lim
t!1 0
Z
u.x; t/'.x; t/dxdt
(7.6)
147
lim
t!1 0
for all ' from L2 .0; TI V/. We shall prove that this limit u is a solution of
Problem 7.1. From (7.2) we have
Z
0
0
T
T
0
.fn ; v/.t/dt
for all v in Vn D spanf!1 ; : : : ; !n g and in C01 ..0; T//. We shall show that this
identity is satisfied for the limit function u and for all v in V.
As for the linear terms, we have, for any v 2 Vm , where m is any given integer,
Z
lim
n!1 0
n!1 0
T
0
which follows from the definition of the weak-star convergence in L1 .0; TI H/, as
v.x/ 0 .t/ 2 L1 .0; TI H/. Similarly,
Z
lim
n!1 0
Z
..un .t/; v//.t/dt D lim
Z
n!1 0
ru.x; t/rv.x/.t/dxdt D
0
..u.t/; v//.t/dt;
n!1 0
Z
.fn ; v/.t/dt D
.f ; v/.t/dt;
as fn ! f strongly in L2 .Q/.
The only problem which remains is that with the convergence of the nonlinear
term. Weak convergences of un to u as in (7.5) and (7.6) are not sufficient to pass to
the limit in the nonlinear term. This is a typical problem when dealing with nonlinear
terms.
Exercise 7.2. Prove that, in general, if un ! u and vn ! v weakly in L2 .Q/ then it
does not follow that un vn ! uv in the sense of distributions on Q.
148
n!1 0
Z
b.un .t/; un .t/; v/.t/dt D
T
0
(7.7)
(7.8)
for the above subsequence of the sequence of approximate solutions (or for some of
its subsequences).
Lemma 7.1. Let a.; / be a continuous bilinear form in the Banach space X with
norm k k, un ! u strongly and vn ! v weakly in X. Then limn!1 a.un ; vn / D
a.u; v/.
Proof. Since the sequence un is strongly convergent and the sequence vn is bounded
as weakly convergent, it is a.un ; vn / a.u; v/ D a.un u; vn / C a.u; vn v/ and
ja.un u; vn /j Ckun ukkvn k ! 0. As for the second term, there exists u 2 V 0 ,
the dual of V such that a.u; vn v/ D hu ; vn viV 0 V ! 0 since the sequence vn
is weakly convergent in H.
t
u
Exercise 7.3. Prove (7.7) using (7.6), (7.8), and Lemma 7.1.
Exercise 7.4. Prove (7.8) by proving first that
the sequence
f@t un g is bounded in
L2 .0; TI V 0 /
0
T
..u.t/; v//.t/dt
(7.9)
Z
T
0
.f ; v/.t/dt
149
u.0/ D u0
dw.t/
C Aw.t/ C B.u.t// B.v.t//; w.t/ D 0;
dt
that is, see Theorem 3.16,
1d
jw.t/j2 C kw.t/k2 C b.u.t/; u.t/; w.t// b.v.t/; v.t/; w.t// D 0:
2 dt
Further, using a property of the trilinear form b, we obtain
1d
jw.t/j2 C kw.t/k2 D b.w.t/; v.t/; w.t//:
2 dt
We shall estimate the right-hand side applying to it the Ladyzhenskaya inequality
(cf. Exercise 4.8),
kukL4 .Q/2 Cjuj1=2 kuk1=2
for
u 2 V:
We have
jb.u; v; w/j kukL4 .Q/2 kvkkwkL4 .Q/2 c1 juj1=2 kuk1=2 kvkjwj1=2 kwk1=2 :
Therefore,
b.w.t/; v.t/; w.t// c1 jw.t/kjv.t/kkw.t/k
c2
kw.t/k2 C jw.t/j2 kv.t/k2 :
2
150
We have then
c2
d
jw.t/j2 C kw.t/k2 jw.t/j2 kv.t/k2 :
dt
Now, in view of the Gronwall inequality we have, for t 0,
Z t
c2
kv.s/k2 ds :
jw.t/j2 jw.0/j2 exp
0
As w.0/ D 0, u.t/ D v.t/ for all t > 0 which proves the uniqueness. From the
uniqueness result together with our construction of a weak solution on an arbitrary
interval .0; T/ follows the existence of a unique global solution defined on the
interval .0; 1/.
Observe that from the above inequality it follows also the continuous dependence
of solutions on the initial data: the map u0 ! u.t/ is continuous as a map in H for
t > 0. This completes the proof of Theorem 7.1.
t
u
Remark 7.1. One can prove that under the assumptions of Theorem 7.1 the solution
u belongs to the space L2 .; TI D.A// for all T > 0 and 0 < < T, where D.A/ is
the domain of the Stokes operator, cf. Sect. 4.1.
Exercise 7.9. Compute the constants C./, k1 ./ in inequality (7.4).
Exercise 7.10. Prove an existence and uniqueness theorem analogous to Theorem 7.1 for the case of homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions u D 0 at
@ .0; T/, where is a bounded open set in R2 , and the spaces H and V in
Theorem 7.1 are accordingly modified.
Exercise 7.11. Consider the nonhomogeneous Dirichlet boundary condition u D a
at @ .0; T/, where is a bounded open set in R2 with sufficiently smooth
boundary, and where the function a is defined in , a 2 H 1 ./, div a D 0, so that
u a 2 V. Formulate and prove an existence and uniqueness theorem analogous to
Theorem 7.1 for this case.
Exercise 7.12. Non-autonomous problem. Using the argument of the proof of
Theorem 7.1 prove the following result.
Theorem 7.2. Let V H V 0 be either given by the homogeneous Dirichlet
boundary conditions on an open and bounded set R2 with Lipschitz boundary
or the periodic boundary conditions on a two-dimensional box. Let u0 2 H and
2
f 2 Lloc
.RC I V 0 /. Then there exists a unique function u W RC ! H such that
u 2 L2 .0; TI V/ \ C.0; TI H/;
u.0/ D u0 ;
151
in the sense of scalar distributions on .0; 1/. Moreover, the map u0 ! u.t/ is
continuous as a map in H.
Remark 7.2. Consider either the two-dimensional periodic problem or the homogeneous Dirichlet problem on the bounded domain R2 of class C2 . Let
2
f 2 Lloc
.RC I H/ and u0 2 H. Then the solution u given in Theorem 7.2 belongs
2
to L .; TI D.A// for all 0 < < T < 1 (see, for example, Theorem 7.4 in [99] or
Theorem III.3.10 in [219]).
Remark 7.3. For the case of homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions, the
existence results of Theorems 7.1 and 7.2 can be extended to the case of unbounded
domains, where the embedding V H is not compact. For the treatment of this case
see, e.g., [201, 219].
B.x; "/;
x2A
and B.x; "/ is the open ball in X with radius " and centered at x.
Definition 7.3. The set A X shall be called invariant with respect to the
semigroup fS.t/gt0 if S.t/A D A for all t 0.
Definition 7.4. The Hausdorff semi-distance in the metric space X between two
nonempty sets A; B X is defined as
distX .A; B/ D sup inf .x; y/:
x2A y2B
152
Exercise 7.13. Prove that the last property in the definition of the global attractor
(attraction) is equivalent to say that for every bounded set B X we have
lim distX .S.t/B; A / D 0:
t!1
T S
Step 1. !.B/ is nonempty and compact in X. As !.B/ D s0 ts S.t/B, where
S
the sets ts S.t/B are nonempty and compact for s t0 .B/ (the semigroup
is uniformly compact and B is bounded) and constitute a nonincreasing family
153
Fig. 7.2 Illustration of the !-limit set of the point u0 . The set !.fu0 g/ consists of all cluster points
of all sequences fS.tn /u0 g for tn ! 1
of sets as s grows, then !.B/ is not empty and compact in view of the Cantor
theorem.
Step 2. !.B/ is invariant: S.t/!.B/ D !.B/ for all t > 0.
()) S.t/!.B/ !.B/. Let S.t/ D , 2 !.B/. We shall show that 2 !.B/.
For there exist sequences: n in B and tn ! 1 such that S.t/ n ! . Hence,
S.t/S.tn / n D S.t C tn / n ! S.t/ D (as the operator S.t/ is continuous).
Moreover, 2 !.B/ by definition of the !-limit set, as the sequence S.t C tn / n
converges to , where t C tn ! 1.
(() !.B/ S.t/!.B/. Let 2 !.B/. We shall show that there exists
2
!.B/
such
that
S.t/
D
.
Let
S.t
/
!
,
t
!
1,
2
B.
As
the
sets
n n
n
n
S
stn t S.s/B are precompact for tn t t0 thus the sequence S.tn t/n contains
a convergent subsequence S.t t/ ! for some 2 X. But 2 !.B/ as
2 B and t t ! 1. Moreover, S.t/S.t t/ D S.t / ! D S.t/ ,
from the continuity of S.t/.
Step 3. A D !.B/ attracts bounded subsets G of X.
Assume that this is not true. Then distX .S.t/G; A / > 0 for t ! 1, that
is, there exist sequences tn ! 1 and n 2 G such that distX .S.tn /n ; A /
> 0 for all n. On the other hand, the sequence S.tn /n contains a convergent
subsequence, S.t / ! , 2 A D !.B/ as S.t / D S.t t/S.t/ and
for t such that S.t/G B, S.t/ 2 B.
t
u
Exercise 7.15. Prove that A is a maximal, in the sense of the inclusion relation,
bounded invariant set.
Solution. Assume that A A1 , A1 different from A , bounded and invariant. As B
absorbs A1 , S.t/A1 B for large t, then A1 B as S.t/A1 D A1 from our
assumption. Hence, !.A1 / D A1 !.B/ D A , and we have a contradiction.
154
155
S.t/u0 D u.t/;
(7.10)
where u./ is the unique weak solution of the considered problem with u.0/ D u0 ,
is a continuous semigroup in X. Our aim is to prove the following
Theorem 7.4 (Existence of a Global Attractor in H). Under the assumptions
of Theorem 7.1 there exists a global attractor A for the semigroup fS.t/gt0
in H associated with the two-dimensional NavierStokes equations with periodic
boundary conditions.
Proof. Step 1. Existence of a bounded absorbing set in H. From the first energy
inequality, cf. inequality (7.3),
d
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2 C./jf j2 ;
dt
(7.11)
156
the scalar product of the NavierStokes equation with Au (for u 2 D.A/; Au D u,
cf. Remark 7.1) we obtain
d
kuk2 C 2jAuj2 D 2.f ; Au/;
dt
(7.13)
(7.14)
Exercise 7.22. Prove that kuk C1 jAuj for u 2 D.A/ and compute the constants
C, C1 , and k1 above.
Now, to estimate the norm ku.t/k we cannot use the Gronwall inequality since our
initial condition u0 is only in H and not in V. Instead, we shall use the uniform
Gronwall inequality (cf. Lemma 3.21). To apply the uniform Gronwall lemma, we
proceed as follows. First, from inequality (7.11), after integration in the interval
.t; t C r/, where t t0 .u0 /, we obtain in particular,
Z tCr
ku.t/k2 ds C./rjf j2 C 2 D a3
(7.15)
t
for all t t0 .B1 /. Then, from inequality (7.14) and the uniform Gronwall lemma
we get directly
a
3
C a2
for all t t0 C r;
(7.16)
ku.t/k2
r
where
Z
tCr
a2 D
t
Cjf j2 dt D rCjf j2 ;
a3 D
1
.rCjf j2 C 2 /;
[cf. (7.15)]. Estimate (7.16) means that our bounded set B1 is moved by S.t/, for
t t0 C r, into a ball in V,
a
3
C a2
for all t t0 C r; x 2 B1 ;
kS.t/xk2
r
157
S.t/B1
is precompact in H:
tt0 Cr
u 2 D.A/:
for
Exercise 7.24. Prove that from the uniform compactness of the semigroup S.t/ in
H it follows the existence of a compact absorbing set in H.
Exercise 7.25. Prove that if f 2 L1 .RC I H/, then the bounded absorbing set in V
exists for the corresponding non-autonomous problem.
in Q;
div u D 0
in Q;
for all
v2V
158
or, equivalently,
Au C Bu D f
in H
or
V 0:
Assuming that the viscosity is large enough with respect to the volume force f we
shall prove convergence of solutions u.t/ of the nonstationary problem to the unique
stationary solution u1 as time goes to infinity.
Theorem 7.5. There exists a constant c1 .Q/ such that if 2 > c1 .Q/kf kV 0 then the
stationary solution u1 is unique. Moreover, for each u0 2 H the solution u of the
problem:
2
.0; 1I V/;
u 2 C.0; 1/I H/ \ Lloc
u.0/ D u0 ;
d
.u.t/; v/ C ..u.t/; v// C b.u.t/; u.t/; v/ D hf ; vi for all
dt
v 2 V;
t ! 1:
in V 0 :
Thus, in particular,
dw.t/
C Aw.t/ C B.u.t// B.u1 /; w.t/ D 0;
dt
that is,
1d
jw.t/j2 C kw.t/k2 C b.u.t/; u.t/; w.t// b.u1 ; u1 ; w.t// D 0:
2 dt
Further, using a property of the trilinear form b, we obtain
1d
jw.t/j2 C kw.t/k2 D b.w.t/; u1 ; w.t//:
2 dt
(7.17)
159
Thus,
b.w.t/; u1 ; w.t// c1 jw.t/jku1 kkw.t/k
c2
kw.t/k2 C jw.t/j2 ku1 k2 :
2
We have then
d
c2
jw.t/j2 C kw.t/k2 jw.t/j2 ku1 k2 ;
dt
and further, as jw.t/j Ckw.t/k, we have
c2
d
jw.t/j2 C C ku1 k2 jw.t/j2 0:
dt
(7.18)
c2
c2
ku1 k2 C 3 kf k2V 0 > 0
for large [satisfying 2 > c1 .Q/kf kV 0 for some constant c1 .Q/]. Thus, from
inequality (7.18) it follows (for these ) the uniqueness of the stationary solution
u1 and also the exponential decay in H of u.t/ to u1 as t ! 1, and this ends the
proof.
t
u
Exercise 7.26. Prove the above theorem without using the Ladyzhenskaya inequality, by estimating in a different way the right-hand side of Eq. (7.17). Compare the
constants c1 .Q/ in both cases for the problem with periodic boundary conditions.
4 2
L2
Remark 7.5. Observe that for our force f the Grashof number
GD
jf j
Ljj
Dp
;
2
1
2 2 1
160
Af D 1 f ;
B.f ; f / D 0:
(7.19)
1
X
uO k !k
kD1
we have,
kuk2 1 juj2 D
1
X
.k 1 /jOuk j2 ;
kD5
and also
jAuj2 1 kuk2 D
1
X
k .k 1 /jOuk j2
kD5
5
1
X
.k 1 /jOuk j2 D 5 .kuk2 1 juj2 /:
kD5
161
Thus, we have
1d
.kuk2 1 juj2 / C 5 .kuk2 1 juj2 / 0;
2 dt
and
lim .ku.t/k2 1 ju.t/j2 / D 0:
t!1
(7.20)
1
X
jOuk j2
kD5
1
X
1
.k 1 /jOuk j2
5 1 kD5
1
.kuk2 1 juj2 /:
5 1
(7.21)
t!1
We have shown that all higher harmonics go to zero as time goes to infinity. Let
uN D 1 1 f be the stationary solution. We define v.t/ D u.t/ uN , the difference
between some nonstationary solution and the stationary solution uN . As P4 uN D uN
then Q4 v.t/ D Q4 u.t/ ! 0 as t ! 1. We shall show that also P4 v.t/ ! 0 as
t ! 1, so that v.t/ ! 0 and hence u.t/ ! uN as t ! 1. We have
dv
C Av C B.v; v/ C B.v; uN / C B.Nu; v/ D 0:
dt
We multiply this equation by P4 v in H and use kP4 vk2 D 1 jP4 vj2 to get
1d
jP4 vj2 C 1 jP4 vj2 C b.v; v; P4 v/ C b.v; uN ; P4 v/ C b.Nu; v; P4 v/ D 0:
2 dt
Let us write v D P4 v C Q4 v and use jQ4 v.t/j ! 0 as t ! 1. We can write the
above equation in the form
1 d
jP4 vj2 C 1 jP4 vj2 C b.P4 v; P4 v; P4 v/ C b.P4 v; uN ; P4 v/ C b.Nu; P4 v; P4 v/ D .t/;
2 dt
where .t/ ! 0 as t ! 1 since all terms in .t/ are of the form b.x; y; z/ where at
least one variable is equal to Q4 v.t/. Moreover b.P4 v; P4 v; P4 v/ D 0 and
b.P4 v; uN ; P4 v/ C b.Nu; P4 v; P4 v/ D b.P4 v; P4 v; uN / D 0:
162
Exercise 7.27. Write P4 v as a sum of the first four eigenvectors to check directly
that b.P4 v; P4 v; uN / D 0.
In this way we have obtained
1d
jP4 vj2 C 1 jP4 vj2 .t/;
2 dt
.t/ ! 0;
t ! 1;
whence
lim jP4 u.t/j2 D 0;
t!1
and
lim ju.t/ uN j D 0:
t!1
du
C A.m u f / C m B.u; u/ D 0:
dt
1
.v
m
1 dv
du
D
;
dt
dt
hence, multiplying Eq. (7.22) by we have the following equation for v.t/,
dv
C Av C B.u; u/ D 0;
dt
(7.22)
where
uD
1
.v C f /:
m
163
1
c1 kvk2 kf k D c1 kvk2 m jf j D pc1 kvk2 jf j;
b.v;
f
;
v/
m
m
m
m
whence,
1d 2
c1
jvj C p
jf j kvk2 0:
2 dt
m
(7.23)
For any fixed f satisfying (7.19) there exists a natural number m0 such that for all
m m0 , m D pc1 jf j > 0 and then all solutions v.t/ converge to zero in
m
for
1
kvk2
1
we obtain
t 0:
This means that u.t/ ! uN D 1m f in H as t ! 1 and proves also that uN is the
unique solution of the stationary problem.
Remark 7.6. Observe that though the norm of our f in H may be large, its norm in
H 1 is equal to p1 jf j and for m large is small.
m
164
the same as in the case of the linear (Stokes) flow. In this section we shall study
more precisely the transport of energy in the fluid. We know (cf. Sect. 7.4) that the
velocity u.x; t/ can be represented as a Fourier series
u.x; t/ D
1
X
uO k .t/!k .x/;
kD1
e.u/ D
1X
jOuk j2 :
2 kD1
Let u D y C z, where
yD
m
X
uO k !k ;
kD1
zD
1
X
uO k !k :
kDmC1
We have,
e.u/ D e.y/ C e.z/;
where
1X
jOuk j2 ;
2 kD1
m
e.y/ D
e.z/ D
1
1 X
jOuk j2
2 kDmC1
are kinetic energies of the large scale component y of the flow and the small scale
component z. Now, in the balance of the kinetic energies of components y and z the
nonlinear term will not reduce to zero. We shall show how the kinetic energy of
particular components of the flow is distributed in time among the Fourier modes.
Let us assume that the external force is given by
f D
m2
X
fOk !k ;
1 m1 m2 < 1:
kDm1
165
(7.24)
d
e.z/ C E.z/ D y .z/;
dt
(7.25)
and
where
z .y/ D b.z; z; y/ C b.y; y; z/;
Observe that z .y/ C y .z/ D 0. In (7.24) z .y/ is the net amount of kinetic energy
per unit time transferred from small length scales z to large length scales y (similarly,
y .z/ is the net amount of kinetic energy per unit time transferred from large length
scales y to small length scales z), while the term E.y/ represents the rate of energy
dissipation by viscous effects per unit time for the large length scale and .f ; y/ is the
energy flow injected into the large length scales by the forcing term.
166
We shall show that on average, over time and space, y .z/ 0, that is,
if the external forces act in the range of large length scales y then, on average, the net transfer
of kinetic energy occurs only into the small scales.
E.z.s//ds D
y .z.s//ds C e.z.0//:
1
T
1
T
y .z.s//ds:
1
lim
T!1 T
T
0
y .z.s//ds
exists, we have
1
1
lim
jj T!1 T
y .z.s//ds 0:
m2
X
fOk !k ;
kDm1
where now 1 m m1 , m1 > 1. Thus, the force acts in the range of small
length scales. Prove that the transfer of energy is then from higher modes (small
length scales) to lower modes (large length scales), which is called an inverse energy
transfer. The inverse energy transfer in the large scales may be responsible for the
observed persistent low-wave number coherent structures in turbulent flows.
167
weak solution and considered, in the simplest context, a problem of regularity of the
weak solution. We saw the utility of the Galerkin method of approximate solutions,
the importance of compactness theorems, here, the AubinLions compactness
theorem, in particular. The usefulness of basic functional inequalities: the Poincar
inequality, the Ladyzhenskaya inequality, and the Agmon inequality, as well as the
role of the Gronwall and the uniform Gronwall inequalities were demonstrated.
Further considerations and details concerning the existence of solutions and
global attractors for autonomous two-dimensional NavierStokes flows in a
bounded domain can be found, e.g., in [88, 197, 220]. For the study of threedimensional case see, e.g., [76]. For the existence and regularity of solutions for
problems on unbounded domains which do not satisfy the Poincar inequality see
[237, 238] and for the problems on cylindrical domains see [192, 196, 233]. In
Sects. 7.4 and 7.5 we followed closely the argument from [99].
In Chap. 8 we shall show the connections of the global attractor with statistical
solutions of the NavierStokes equations.
In Chap. 9 we shall apply the presented techniques to a problem of a shear flow
taken from the theory of lubrication and shall prove that the global attractor has a
finite fractal dimension.
Non-autonomous system of the NavierStokes equations and flows in unbounded
domains will be considered in Chaps. 11 and 13, respectively.
u.0/ D u0
is given by u.t/ D S.t/u0 for t 0. The map .t; u/ ! S.t/u is continuous from
0; 1/ H to H.
Our first aim is to prove the following theorem.
Theorem 8.1. Let LIMT!1 be a fixed Banach generalized limit. Then for every
u0 2 H there exists a probability measure on H such that
LIMT!1
1
T
T
0
Z
.S.t/u0 /dt D
.u/d .u/
(8.1)
169
170
0;
.T/ if the limit on the right-hand side exists.
Remark 8.1. Such functionals exist, there may be many of them, hence in Eq. (8.1)
the measure depends not only on the initial condition u0 but also on the choice of
LIMT!1 [note that in (8.1) the right-hand side is defined by the left-hand side].
To prove the existence of LIMT!1 we shall use the HahnBanach theorem
(cf. Theorem 8.2). Let
G0 D f
existsg:
on
G0 ;
and
p.
C / p. / C p./;
p. / D p. /;
0
for ; 2 B.0; 1//. In view of the HahnBanach theorem there exists an extension
of 0 to the whole space, satisfying . / p. / D lim supt!1 .t/ for
all
2 B.0; 1//. It then follows (cf. also Exercise 8.1) that . / 0 for all
nonnegative 2 B.0; 1//. We denote . / D LIMT!1 .T/.
2 B.0; 1//,
T!1
whence
jLIMT!1 .T/j lim sup .T/ sup j .T/j:
T!1
T0
We are going now to prove Theorem 8.1. At first, we assume that there exists a
measure as in (8.1) for some fixed u0 2 H and LIMT!1 , and derive its basic
properties which follow from this formula.
1. is a probability measure, i.e., .H/ D 1. Take 1 on H to get
1 D LIMT!1
1
T
Z
0
Z
1dt D
1d .u/ D .H/:
H
171
Z
.S.t/u/d .u/ D
H
.u/d .u/
(8.2)
for all 2 C.H/. To this end observe that by the uniform compactness of the
semigroup (cf. Sect. 7.2) we have
Z
.S. /u/d .u/ D LIMT!1
H
1
T
T
0
Z
1 TC
.S.t/u0 /dt
T
Z
n1 Z T
1 TC
D LIMT!1
.S.t/u0 /dt C
.S.t/u0 /dt
T 0
T T
Z
o
1
.S.t/u0 /dt
T 0
Z
Z
1 T
.S.t/u0 /dt D
.u/d .u/:
D LIMT!1
T 0
H
D LIMT!1
This identity can be extended to all functions which are -integrable on H. Setting
D E the characteristic function of E H, we obtain
Z
Z
E .S.t/u/d .u/ D
H
E .u/d .u/;
H
for each
n 1:
(8.3)
172
vn ! v 2 A . But then also S.s0n /u0 ! v, and therefore .S.s0n /u0 / ! .v/ as
m ! 1, which contradicts (8.3).
3. The support of is contained in the global attractor A . We shall make use of
the following lemma.
Lemma 8.1. The support of the measure contains only the nonwandering points,
that is, points u 2 H such that for every open neighborhood A of u in H there exists
a sequence of times tn ! 1 for which S.tn /A \ A 6D ; for every n.
Remark 8.3. The set M1 of nonwandering points is closed and invariant. If the phase
space is compact, then M1 is a nonempty and compact set. Then, every trajectory
converges to M1 [186].
Proof (of Lemma 8.1). Let F be the support of the measure , F D supp the
smallest closed set such that .F/ D 1.
Step 1. First we shall prove that for u 2 F and a set A containing u which is
relatively open in F, .A/ > 0. Assuming that .A/ D 0 we obtain .FnA/ D 1,
F n A is closed, compact in F, and different from F, hence F is not the support of
which gives a contradiction.
Fig. 8.1 Illustration of the
set C .A / n S.T/ C .A /
used in the proof of
Lemma 8.1
173
Corollary 8.1. The support of the measure is contained in the global attractor
A for the semigroup fS.t/gt0 .
Proof. Every point outside of the global attractor is wandering, that is, it is not a
nonwandering point.
u
t
We have also the following property of the measure .
Corollary 8.2. .S.t/E/ D .E/ for all -measurable E A and t 2 R.
Proof. The semigroup fS.t/gt0 reduced to A is a complete dynamical system
(we have a result about the backward uniqueness on the attractor for the twodimensional NavierStokes equations, see [197], Theorem 12.8), hence, in view of
the invariance of ,
.E/ D .S.t/1 S.t/E/ D .S.t/E/;
t
u
Step 1. We shall prove that for every u0 2 H and for every continuous function
W H ! R there exists a limit
Z
1 T
.S.t/u0 /dt:
L./ D LIMT!1
T 0
Assume we have chosen the functional LIMT!1 . It suffices to show that the
function
Z
1 T
f .T/ D
.S.t/u0 /dt
T 0
is bounded on the interval 0; 1/. We know that there exists a compact absorbing
set X for the semigroup fS.t/gt0 (cf. Sect. 7.2). Hence, the function t !
.S.t/u0 / is continuous and bounded on the compact set C .u0 /. Therefore, the
function T ! .T/ is bounded (and also continuous) on 0; 1/.
Step 2. L./ depends only on values of on any compact absorbing set X. It
means that if 1 is another function in C.H/ which is equal to on X then
L./ D L.1 /.
To prove this property observe that there exists T0 such that
.S.t/u0 / 1 .S.t/u0 / D 0
for t T0 , as S.t/u0 2 X for large times. Thus,
Z
1 T
..S.t/u0 / 1 .S.t/u0 //dt
L. 1 / D LIMT!1
T 0
Z
1 T0
..S.t/u0 / 1 .S.t/u0 //dt D 0:
D LIMT!1
T 0
174
.u/d .u/
for all
2 C.X/0 :
We can extend this measure to the whole phase space setting .E/
Q
D .E \ X/
for E H. We shall denote this extended measure simply by in what follows.
Then, in particular, .H n X/ D 0. Further, from the Tietze extension theorem
(Theorem 8.4) we know that every function
2 C.X/ can be extended to a
continuous function on the whole space without enlarging the norm. Thus,
1
LIMT!1
T
T
0
D G. / .jX D /
Z
D
.u/d .u/ .RieszKakutani theorem/
Z
.u/d .u/
Since is a time averaged measure, it is invariant. We have shown that every such
measure is supported on the global attractor. Thus, .A / D 1 and
LIMT!1
1
T
T
0
.S.t/u0 /dt D
1
.A /
Z
A
2 C.H/:
t
u
Remark 8.4. The existence of a compact absorbing set is not needed to prove the
existence of . We shall provide a simple proof that works in uniformly convex
Banach spaces.
Let K be the closed convex hull of the global attractor. As A is compact, it
is known that K is also a compact subset of H (see [3], Theorem 5.35). As K is
compact and H is uniformly convex, for each u 2 H there exists a unique ku 2 K
such that ju ku j D infk2K ju kj and the projection operator P W u 2 H ! ku 2 K
is continuous.
Given u0 2 H consider t ! P.S.t/u0 /, the projection onto K of the trajectory
t ! S.t/u0 . Since K is compact, the function 0; 1/ 3 t ! .P.S.t/u0 // 2 R is
continuous and bounded for 2 C.H/.
175
Moreover
j.S.t/u0 / .P.S.t/u0 //j ! 0 as
s ! 1:
(8.4)
.P.S.t/u0 //dt:
(8.5)
1
T
T
0
1
T
Z
0
The right-hand side defines a linear positive functional on C.K/. The rest of the
proof is similar to that in step 3 above, where now K plays the role of the compact
absorbing set X.
Exercise 8.3. Prove that the projection operator P W u 2 H ! ku 2 K is continuous.
Exercise 8.4. Prove (8.4) and (8.5).
Below we present the basic theorems which have been used above.
Theorem 8.2 (HahnBanach). Let X be a real linear space, p W X ! R a function
such that
p.x C y/ p.x/ C p.y/;
p.x/ D p.x/
x 2 Y;
F.x/ p.x/;
x 2 X:
is openg;
K is compactg:
176
If
du.t/
D F.u.t//;
dt
(8.7)
then from (8.6) by formal differentiation with respect to t and from (8.7) we obtain
Z
Z
d
d
.u/d t .u/ D
.S.t/u/d 0 .u/
dt X
dt X
Z
Z
d
0
.S.t/u/ .S.t/u/d 0 .u/ D 0 .S.t/u/F.S.t/u/d 0 .u/
D
dt
X
X
Z
0 .u/F.u/d t .u/:
D
X
Hence,
d
dt
Z
.u/d t .u/ D
X
0 .u/F.u/d t .u/:
(8.8)
0 .u/F.u/d .u/ D 0;
X
(8.9)
177
We proved (in Sect. 8.1) existence of probability measures invariant with respect
to the semigroup fS.t/gt0 associated with the above NavierStokes system. Thus,
there exists a Borel measure on the phase space H for which .S.t/1 E/ D .E/
for Borel sets E in H. Moreover, .H/ D 1. For such measure formula (8.9) holds
true. We shall give the precise meaning to this formula in the case of the twodimensional NavierStokes dynamical system. Let us define the class of the test
functions .
Definition 8.2. To the class T of test functions belong real-valued functionals
D .u/ defined on H, which are bounded on bounded subsets of H and such
that
(i) For any u 2 V, the Frchet derivative 0 .u/ taken in H along V exists. More
precisely, for each u 2 V, there exists an element in H denoted 0 .u/ such that
j.u C v/ .u/ . 0 .u/; v/j
! 0 as
jvj
jvj ! 0;
v 2 V;
(8.10)
(8.11)
178
As .HnV/ D 0, from (8.10) and (8.11) it follows [cf. condition (ii) of the definition
of the class T ] that the integral
Z
.Au C B.u/ f ; 0 .u//d .u/
H
Z
.f ; u/d .u/ jf j
jujd .u/ jf j
juj d .u/
12
.E/ 2
jf j
Z
12
kuk2 d .u/
12
< 1:
kuk d .u/
E
.f ; u/d .u/
E
jf j
1
12
Z
kuk d .u/
E
and we have,
Z
kuk2 d .u/
jf j2
;
2 1
juj2 d .u/
jf j2
:
2 21
and
Z
E
12
< 1;
For E1 D
jf j2
2 21
179
and E2 D 1 we have
juj2
jf j2
0
2 21
jf j
supp u 2 H W juj
1
\ V:
Now, we shall prove existence of a stationary statistical solution for the twodimensional NavierStokes system.
Theorem 8.5. Let be a probability measure on H invariant with respect to the
semigroup fS.t/gt0 associated with the two-dimensional NavierStokes system.
Then is a stationary statistical solution of the system.
Step 1. Since is invariant, it is concentrated on the global attractor. Thus
Proof.
kuk d .u/ D
A
(8.12)
1
T
Z
D
H
T
0
1
T
Z
0
180
Thus,
Z
1
f.S.t/u/ .u/gd .u/;
T
(8.13)
as
d
.u/ D .F.u/; 0 .u//:
dt
The right-hand side of (8.13) tends to 0 as T ! 1, as the function t ! .S.t/u/
is bounded. This proves (8.12).
Step 3. Now we shall prove that
Z
E1 juj2 <E2
(8.14)
for all 0 E1 < E2 1. In particular the left-hand side is not positive which
gives the third property of the stationary statistical solution. From the energy
equation
1
jS.t/uj2 C
2
kS.s/uk2 ds D
1 2
juj C
2
Z
0
.f ; S.s/u/ds;
t
0
fkS.s/uk2 .f ; S.s/u/gds D
1
fjuj2 jS.t/uj2 g
2
(8.15)
for t 0. From the invariance of , the Fubini theorem, and (8.15) we get
Z
E1 juj2 <E2
D
D
D
1
T
Z
T
0
Z
E1 juj2 <E2
E1 juj2 <E2
1
2
1
T
E1 juj2 <E2
Z
E1 juj2 <E2
1
fjuj2 jS.t/uj2 gd .u/
T
for every T 0. Passing with T to 1 we obtain zero on the right-hand side. This
proves (8.14).
t
u
181
Remark 8.5. In fact, the converse is also true. If is a stationary statistical solution,
then is a probability measure invariant with respect to the semigroup fS.t/gt0
(cf. Chap. 4 in [99]).
We start this chapter from necessary background on the theory of fractal dimension.
Next, we formulate and study a problem which models the two-dimensional
boundary driven shear flow in lubrication theory. After the derivation of the energy
dissipation rate estimate and a version of LiebThirring inequality we provide an
estimate from above on the global attractor fractal dimension.
The value dfX .K/ can be equal to 1 even if K is a compact set. If the set K is
not relatively compact, we set dfK .K/ D 1. In the next result we recall several
properties of dfX .
183
184
dfX
N
[
!
Kk
kD1
kD1;:::;N
for all
x; y 2 X;
then
dfX .f .K//
dfX .K/
K X:
(iii) We have dfX .K/ D dfX .K/ for every relatively compact K X, where K is the
closure of K in X.
Note that property (i) does not hold for countable unions. Indeed, let X D R and
K D 0; 1 \ Q. From (iii) it follows that dfX .K/ D dfX .0; 1/, and it is easy to verify
that dfX .0; 1/ D 1, while for every point x 2 K we have dfX .fxg/ D 0.
If we know that an infinite dimensional semiflow fS.t/gt0 is defined by the
solution maps of an initial and boundary value problem and it has a global attractor
A , then we can restrict the dynamical system to the attractor, an invariant set, i.e.,
treat the family fS.t/gt0 as the mappings S.t/ W A ! A , thus interpreting the
global attractor as the image of the flow after a long time of evolution (keeping
in mind that all trajectories are arbitrarily close to the attractor after a long time,
but each trajectory does not necessarily have one corresponding trajectory on the
attractor, to which it becomes attracted in the norm, such trajectories exist, but only
on finite time intervals, the length of which goes to infinity as time goes to infinity,
see [197] Proposition 10.14 and Corollary 10.15).
An important question that arises is the following: can the dynamics on the
attractor be described by means of the time evolution of a finite number of variables
without loss of information? From the fact that the global attractor exists, we only
know that it is compact, and hence it must have an empty interior in an infinite
dimensional phase space H, but such compact sets can be still large. Indeed, if
a Banach space V embeds compactly in the phase space H, then any set, that is
bounded in V, is relatively compact in H, so, potentially, a ball in V is an admissible
candidate for the attractor. In certain cases, however, it is possible to obtain much
more knowledge on the attractor than only its compactness: namely it is possible
to show that it has finite fractal dimension. If we could prove that the attractor is a
finite dimensional manifold, then it would be natural to use its parameterization, and
reduce the dynamics to the finite dimensional one. Unfortunately, the set of finite
185
fractal dimension can be very complicated and it does not have to be a manifold.
Still, due to the HlderMa Theorem, if the fractal dimension of the attractor is
finite we can reduce the dynamics on the attractor to the finite dimensional one.
Theorem 9.2 (HlderMa, cf. [117]). Let H be a Banach space and let A
H be a compact set such that dfH .A / m2 . Then, almost every bounded linear
function W H ! Rm is a bijection as a map W A ! .A / and its inverse
1 j.A / is Hlder continuous with a certain exponent 2 .0; 1/ depending only
on m and dfH .A /.
The expression almost every in the last theorem is understood in the sense
of prevalence, a generalization on the notion almost everywhere in the sense of
Lebesgue measure to the infinite dimensional Banach spaces. Here we consider
the prevalence in the space of linear and bounded operators L .HI Rm /.
Definition 9.2. The Borel set E X, where X is a Banach space, is said to be
prevalent if there exists a compactly supported probability measure such that
.E C x/ D 1 for all x 2 X. A non-Borel set that contains a prevalent set is also
prevalent.
Using a linear map that satisfies the assumptions of Theorem 9.2 it is possible
to construct the finite dimensional semiflow S .t/ W .A / ! .A / for t 0
conjugate with the original one according to the formula S .t/x D .S.t/ 1 x/.
Unfortunately, this new semiflow is not necessarily Lipschitz continuous, even if
S.t/ are Lipschitz, since 1 is only Hlder. Therefore it can have more than
one solution. Still, this result plays an important role in the theory of finite
dimensional reduction of infinite dimensional dynamical systems, and, clearly, the
finite dimensionality of the global attractor is a strong evidence that the semiflow is
in fact finite dimensional. More information about this theory can be found in the
monograph [198], and, in context of two-dimensional NavierStokes equations, in
the review article [199].
186
sup
u;v2A 0<kuvkX
! 0:
(9.1)
Note (see Sect. V.2.2 in [220]) that the mapping .t; u/ does not have to be defined
uniquely.
We assume that the semiflow is given by a solution map of the following abstract
evolution problem.
du.t/
D F.u.t// in X
dt
u.0/ D u0 in X;
for t > 0;
for
t > 0;
(9.2)
(9.3)
(9.4)
t20;1 u2A
187
1; : : : ;
m/
D .1 ;
1 /X .2 ;
2 /X
: : : .m ;
m /X ;
m elements from
and the space spanned
Nm by all tensor products 1 2 : : : m ofN
m
X
is
denoted
by
X.
We
will
be
interested
in
the
subspace
of
X denoted by
Vm
X D X ^ X ^ : : : ^ X (X appears m times on the right-hand side). This subspace,
containing the m-linear antisymmetric forms, is spanned by the forms
1 ^ 2 ^ : : : ^ m
being the exterior products of the elements from X, defined by
1 ^ 2 ^ : : : ^ m D
^ ::: ^
m/
Vk
D detf.i ;
j /X gi;jD1;:::;m ;
V
and we extend it to the whole k X by linearity. The associated norm is given, for
exterior products of elements from X, by
k1 ^ 2 ^ : : : ^ m k2Vk X D detf.i ; j /X gi;jD1;:::;m :
The importance of the norm of the exterior product k1 ^ 2 ^ : : : ^ m kVm X lies
in the fact that this quantity is the volume of the m-dimensional parallelepiped with
the edges given by 1 ; : : : ; m . We will start the evolution from the volume spanned
by the vectors which are the initial conditions of the linearized system (9.2)(9.3)
and we will derive the condition which guarantees that this volume is uniformly
contracted on the attractor by the linearized semiflow. To this end, for a linear
V and
bounded operator L 2 L .XI X/ let us introduce the operator Lm W X m ! m X by
the formula
Lm .1 ; : : : ; m / D L1 ^ 2 ^ : : : ^ m C 1 ^ L2 ^ : : : ^ m
C : : : C 1 ^ 2 ^ : : : ^ Lm :
188
i
L
Tr.L Q/ D
;
;
k
i kX k
i kX X
iD1
m
where f
i gm
1D1 is the orthogonal basis of the space spanned by fi giD1 , obtained, for
example, by the GramSchmidt procedure.
1d
kU1 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um .t/k2Vm X
2 dt
d
D
.U1 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um .t//; U1 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um .t/ V
m
dt
X
D .U10 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um .t/; U1 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um .t//Vm X C : : :
C .U1 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um1 .t/ ^ Um0 .t/; U1 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um .t//Vm X
D .F 0 .S.t/u0 /U1 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um .t/; U1 .t/ ^ : : : ^ Um .t//Vm X C : : :
189
Rt
0
sup
1 ;:::;m 2X;ki kX 1
being the largest volume obtained from the m-dimensional parallelepiped with
sides no greater than one, by the linearized semiflow. We also introduce auxiliary
quantities
! m .t/ D sup !m .S.t/u0 /;
u0 2A
1
qm .t/ D sup
sup
u0 2A 1 ;:::;m 2X;ki kX 1 t
whence we have
1
t
Z
0
for t t0 :
We conclude the presentation of the method with a result that links the values qm
with the fractal dimension of the global attractor.
Theorem 9.3 (Cf. [57, Corollary 2.2]). Let Assumption A hold and let f W
0; 1/ ! R be a concave function such that for every positive natural number
m we have qm f .m/ and let d > 1 be such that f .d / D 0. Then
190
dfX .A / d :
The above result gives rise to an algorithm. We need to estimate from above the
quantities
Tr.F 0 .S.t/u0 / Q.t//;
and by taking the supremum over 1 ; : : : ; m and over the points u0 in the attractor,
after the integration over time, we obtain the bound on qm by the concave function
of m. Then, it is enough to find a zero of this function to get the bound on
the global attractor fractal dimension. We conclude with two remarks: firstly, the
algorithm works only if the phase space is a Hilbert space, and secondly, the
semiflow must be smooth, i.e., it must be possible to linearize the underlying initial
and boundary value problem and the solution map of the linearized problem must
be a quasidifferential of the original semiflow in accordance with Definition 9.3.
Further in this chapter we will apply the described algorithm to estimate the attractor
dimension for a shear flow in the lubrication theory. Before we move to this problem,
however, we give an account of other techniques useful for the fractal dimension
estimation.
The second class of methods useful for proving the attractor finite dimensionality
relies on obtaining the estimates on the difference of two trajectories. We present
several results from this class of methods.
Theorem 9.4 (Cf. [168, 236]). Let E be a bounded subset of a Banach space H. Let
moreover V be another Banach space compactly embedded in H and let L W H ! H
be a mapping such that E L.E/, and we have
kLu LvkV cku vkH
u; v 2 E
for all
with c > 0:
(9.5)
log 2
191
where vi 2 H and N is the number of balls in H having the radius R4 needed to cover
the ball in V centered at zero having the radius cR. Note that N D N H1 .BV .0; 1//.
4c
We can assume that all balls from the last sum have a nonempty intersection with E,
and we denote the arbitrary points from these intersections by zi , whence
R
E
;
BH zi ;
2
iD1
N
[
N
[
iD1
R
\E :
BH zi ;
2
Now
R
R
\ E BV Lzi ; c
:
BH zi ;
2
2
The ball in V having the radius c R2 can be covered by N balls in H having the radius
R
, whence
8
N
[
R
R
\E
;
BH zi ;
BH vij ;
2
8
jD1
and, if we want the centers to be the points of E, we have
N
[
R
R
\E
;
BH zi ;
BH zij ;
2
4
jD1
with zij 2 E. Repeating this procedure inductively, we can construct a cover of E by
R
N k balls of radius 2Rk . For " > 0 we can always find k 2 N such that 2kC1
< " 2Rk ,
whence N" .E/ N R .E/ N kC1 , and
2kC1
t
u
To get the finite dimensionality of the global attractor by the above theorem, it
would seem easiest to apply it for L D S.t/ for certain t > 0 and E D A . It is
then enough to derive the estimate (9.5), which is known as the smoothing estimate
as it implies that in fact we have A V. While this estimate may be difficult to
192
obtain for L D S.t/, in some cases it is easier to get it for L being the translation
operator defined on the trajectories starting from the attractor (and staying in it,
by invariance), and V; H being the appropriately chosen spaces of time-dependent
functions. This method, known as the method of l-trajectories, was introduced
in [168] and will be used for the two-dimensional NavierStokes equations with
nonmonotone friction in Sect. 10.
The next result, very useful for proving finite dimensionality of global attractors
of infinite dimensional dynamical systems, proved originally by Ladyzhenskaya
(see, for example, [147], where, however, the notion of the Hausdorff dimension is
used), uses the so-called squeezing property. This property involves the estimates
which are not, as in Theorem 9.4, in the space compactly embedded in the
state space, but which involve the finite dimensional projectors. The variant of
Ladyzhenskaya result, that we present here, comes from [70].
Theorem 9.5 (Cf. [70, Theorem 8.1]). Let H be the Hilbert space and let E H
be a compact set. Let moreover L W H ! H be a continuous mapping such that
E L.E/ and there exists an orthogonal projector PN W H ! HN onto the subspace
HN H of dimension N, such that
kP.Lu Lv/kH lku vkH
for all
u; v 2 E;
and
k.I P/.Lu Lv/kH ku vkH
for all
u; v 2 E;
where < 1. Then the fractal dimension dfH .E/ is finite and
dfH .E/
9l
N log
1
log
2
1
1
:
The above theorem has also the non-autonomous version (see Theorem 13.5) which
will be used later in Chap. 13 to prove the finite dimensionality of the pullback
attractor for two-dimensional boundary driven NavierStokes flow.
Comments We refer the reader to [198] for more information about dimensions.
Fractal dimension is also known as upper box counting dimension (see [198] Definition 3.1). Sometimes another notion of dimension, namely, the above mentioned
Hausdorff dimension, is used to study the global attractors for infinite dimensional
dynamical systems. To define it, one needs to use the s-dimensional Hausdorff
measure valid for s 0 and a subset K of a Banach space X, given by
(
HsX .K/ D lim inf
!0
1
X
iD1
jUi js W K
1
[
iD1
)
Ui with jUi j ;
193
(9.6)
div u D 0;
(9.7)
in the channel
1 D fx D .x1 ; x2 / W 1 < x1 < 1; 0 < x2 < h.x1 /g;
where h is a function, positive, smooth, and L-periodic in x1 .
194
Let
D fx D .x1 ; x2 / W 0 < x1 < L; 0 < x2 < h.x1 /g;
and @ D C [ L [ D , where C and D are the bottom and the top, and L is
the lateral part of the boundary of .
We are interested in solutions of (9.6)(9.7) in which are L-periodic with
respect to x1 . Moreover, we assume
u D 0 on
D ;
u D U0 e1 D .U0 ; 0/
(9.8)
C ;
on
(9.9)
for
x 2 :
(9.10)
(9.11)
with
U.0/ D U0 ;
U.h.x1 // D 0;
x1 2 .0; L/:
(9.12)
D [ C ;
(9.13)
(9.14)
(9.15)
195
(9.16)
u.x/ v.x/dx;
and
..u; v// D .ru; rv/
in H and V, respectively, and the corresponding norms
1
jvj D .v; v/ 2
and
Let
b.u; v; w/ D ..u r/v; w/;
and
a.u; v/ D .ru; rv/:
Then the natural weak formulation of the transformed problem (9.13)(9.16) is as
follows.
Problem 9.1. Find
v 2 C.0; TI H/ \ L2 .0; TI V/
for each T > 0, such that
d
.v.t/; / C a.v.t/; / C b.v.t/; v.t/; / D F.v.t/; /
dt
(9.17)
196
(9.18)
for all
u; v 2 V:
1
< kuk2 > D lim sup
jj
T!C1 jj T
197
ku.t/k2 dt:
(9.19)
We estimate first the averaged energy dissipation rate of the flow v, and then use the
relation, cf. (9.11),
Z
Z
2
2
0
ku.t/k D kv.t/k C 2
U .v/1 ;x2 dx C
jU 0 j2 dx:
(9.20)
To estimate the right-hand side of (9.20) we use Eq. (9.17). Taking D v in (9.17),
we obtain
1d 2
jvj C a.v; v/ C b.v; v; v/ D F.v; v/:
2 dt
Since v D 0 on D [ C , is L-periodic in x1 , and div v D 0, we have b.v; v; v/ D 0,
and
1d 2
jvj C kvk2 D F.v; v/:
2 dt
(9.21)
Integrating the above equation in t on the interval .0; T/, dividing by T, and taking
lim sup of both sides we estimate the averaged energy dissipation rate of v. Before,
however, we have to estimate carefully the term F.v; v/ on the right-hand side
of (9.21). By (9.18),
F.v; v/ D a.; v/ b.v; ; v/:
(9.22)
We have
ja.; v/j kkkvk kk2 C
kvk2 :
4
(9.23)
for all
v 2 V:
supp 0; 1=2;
8;
198
h0 D min h.x1 /:
0x1 L
h0 "
U0 ;
2
and
2
Z L Z h.x1 /
Z L Z h.x1 /
v.x1 ; x2 / 2
@v.x1 ; x2 / 2
v
dx2 dx1
x
dx2 dx1 4
@x
x 2
2 L .Q" /
2
2
0
0
0
0
by the Hardy inequality (cf. Theorem 3.12 and Exercise 3.12). Thus, we obtain
jb.v; Ue1 ; v/j kvk2
t
u
In particular,
jb.v; ; v/j
kvk2
4
(9.24)
kvk2 ;
2
and, by (9.21),
1d 2
jvj C kvk2 kk2 :
2 dt
2
(9.25)
(9.26)
199
and
Z
4LU02 1
:
h0 "
(9.27)
Proof. We have jU.x2 /j U0 and supp U Q" , which gives (9.26). Moreover,
Z
as j0 j
Z
0 x2 2
dx
h0 "
Z h0 "
2
U02
4LU02 1
x2 2
0
;
D 2 2L
dx
2
h0 "
h0 "
h0 "
0
U2
jU .x2 /j dx D 2 02
h0 "
t
u
(9.28)
Let hM D max0x1 L h.x1 / and hM =h0 ' 1. Then we can define the Reynolds
number of the flow u by Re D .h0 U0 /=. Observe that for a turbulent flow u (of some
large Reynolds number) " in (9.24) is equal to =.8h0 U0 /. Therefore, from (9.28)
we obtain, as indicated above,
Lemma 9.4. If Re 1 then the time averaged energy dissipation rate per unit
mass .v/ for the flow v can be estimated as follows:
.v/
64L 3 64 3
U
U :
jj 0
h0 0
U03
;
h0
(9.29)
jU 0 j2 dx;
and then we use (9.27) to estimate the second term on the right-hand side.
t
u
200
Estimate (9.29) has the same form as the usual in turbulence theory estimate of the
averaged energy dissipation rate for the NavierStokes boundary driven flow in a
rectangular domain [87, 88, 99].
In the sequel we shall use the estimates of to find an upper bound of the
dimension of the global attractor.
0
12
2 ! X
m
m Z
X
hM
2A
@
'j
dx 1 C
jr'j j2 dx;
L
jD1
jD1
(9.30)
0
m
X
@
12
0
m Z
X
2A
0 @
dx
C
j
0
jD1
jD1
1 12 0
1 12
2
m Z
0
X
@ j 2
C1 m A @
@ j dxA :
@x dx C L2
@x
1
2
1
jD1 1
2
j dx
h2M
@ j 2
dx:
1 @x2
m Z
X
jD1
(9.30) follows.
2
j dx;
t
u
201
v.0/ D v0 ;
and
Uj .0/ D j
for
j D 1; : : : ; m;
(9.31)
(9.32)
(9.33)
jD1
Let A be the global attractor for the transformed flow v./ D S. /v0 , and let
qm D lim sup qm .T/;
T!1
202
where
qm .T/ D sup
v0 2A
sup
j 2H;
jj j1;jD1;:::;m
1
T
T
0
0
Tr L .v. // Qm . / d :
Now, our aim is to obtain estimate (9.37) and then inequality (9.38).
Lemma 9.6. The following estimate holds:
m
X
Tr L0 .v/ Qm
kj k2 C jjL2 ./ kuk;
(9.34)
jD1
where
.x/ D
m
X
jj .x/j2 :
jD1
jD1
m
X
jD1
jD1
kj k2 C
0
jruj @
m
X
1
jj .x/j2 A dx;
jD1
t
u
Now, in our estimates of the trace we use Lemma 9.5. By this lemma, taking into
account that hM
L for a thin domain , and from
Z
.x/dx D m
we have
X
m2
jj2L2 ./ 1
kj k2 ;
jj
jD1
m
(9.35)
where 1 D 2 . Moreover,
m
1
X
1
2
2
jjL2 ./ kuk
jj 2 C
kj k2 C
kuk
kuk2
21 L ./ 2
2 jD1
2
(9.36)
203
1
m2 C
kuk2 :
21 jj
2
(9.37)
1 jj
m2 C
:
21 jj
2 2
(9.38)
Define
aD
;
21 jj
cD
1 jj
:
2 2
We can write
qm am2 C c:
By Theorem 9.3 we have
dfH .A / p;
where p > 0 is such that ap2 C c D 0. Obviously, we have
r
pD
c
:
a
jj
.Re/3=2 :
h20
(9.39)
From the above estimates we conclude the following theorem about strongly
turbulent flows in thin (or elongated) domains.
204
and
Re 1:
(9.40)
Then the fractal dimension of the global attractor A for this flow can be estimated
as follows:
dfH .A /
jj
.Re/3=2 ;
h20
(9.41)
L
.Re/3=2 :
h0
t
u
205
In [241] optimal bounds of the attractor dimension are given for a flow in
a rectangle .0; 2L/ .0; 2L=/, with periodic boundary conditions and given
external forcing. The estimates are of the form c0 = dfH .A / c1 =, see also
[180]. A free boundary conditions are considered in [242], see also [222], and
an upper bound on the attractor dimension established with the use of a suitable
anisotropic version of the LiebThirring inequality.
Estimates of the energy dissipation rate for boundary driven flows, essential in
turbulence theory, are investigated, e.g., in [230] for D .0; Lx / .0; Ly / .0; h/,
and in [229] for a smooth and bounded three-dimensional domains. The best
estimates come from variational methods, cf. [88], and, in particular [134]. Other
contexts and problems can be found, e.g., in monographs [62, 88, 99, 197, 220], and
the literature quoted there.
Boundary driven flows in smooth and bounded two-dimensional domains for
a non-autonomous NavierStokes system are considered in [178], by using an
approach of Chepyzhov and Vishik, cf. [62]. In Chap. 13 we shall consider a shear
flow with time-dependent boundary driving.
10
In this chapter we consider two examples of contact problems. First, we study the
problem of time asymptotics for a class of two-dimensional turbulent boundary
driven flows subject to the Tresca friction law which naturally appears in lubrication
theory. Then we analyze the problem with the generalized Tresca law, where the
friction coefficient can depend on the tangential slip rate.
While the first problem is governed by a variational inequality, since the
underlying potential is convex, the problem with the generalized Tresca law due to
the lack of potential convexity leads to a differential inclusion where the multivalued
term has the form of the Clarke subdifferential.
We prove that in both cases the global attractors exist and they have finite fractal
dimensions. Moreover, there exists an object, called exponential attractor. It contains
the global attractor, has finite fractal dimension and attracts the trajectories exponentially fast in time. This property allows, among other things, to locate the exponential
and thus the global attractor in the phase space by using numerical analysis.
We start the chapter with the section in which we remind a general method of
proving the existence of exponential attractors.
for a.e.
t 2 RC ;
(10.1)
207
208
209
Definition 10.2. The fractal dimension (also known as upper box counting dimension) of a compact set K in a Banach space X is defined as
dfX .K/ D lim sup
"!0
where N"X .K/ is the minimal number of balls of radius " in X needed to cover K.
Another important property that holds for many dynamical systems is the existence
of an exponential attractor.
Definition 10.3. An exponential attractor for a semigroup fS.t/gt0 in a Banach
space X is a subset M of X such that:
M is compact in X,
M is positively invariant, i.e., S.t/M M for every t 0,
fractal dimension of M is finite, i.e., dfX .M / < 1,
M attracts exponentially all bounded subsets of X, i.e., there exist a universal
constant c1 and a monotone function such that for every bounded set B in X,
its image S.t/B is a subset of the ".t/-neighborhood of M for all t t0 , where
".t/ D .kBkX /ec1 t (exponential attraction property).
Since the global attractor A is the minimal compact attracting set it follows that if
both global and exponential attractors exist, then A M and the fractal dimension
of A must be finite. Moreover, in contrast to the global attractor, an exponential
attractor does not have to be unique.
In the following we will remind the abstract framework of [168] (see also [162])
that uses the so-called method of l-trajectories (or short trajectories) to prove the
existence of global and exponential attractors.
Let X, Y, and Z be three Banach spaces such that
Y X
and X Z:
210
then both D vj0;l and all shifts Lt ./ D vjt;lCt for t > 0 are l-trajectories. Note
that the mapping Lt is defined as Lt ./. / D v. C t/ for t > 0 and 2 0; l, where
v is a unique solution such that vj0;l D .
We can now formulate a theorem which gives criteria for the existence of a global
attractor A for the semigroup fS.t/gt0 in X and its finite dimensionality. The
following criteria are stated as assumptions .A1/.A8/ in [168]:
.A1/ for any v0 2 X and arbitrary T > 0 there exists (not necessarily unique)
v 2 Cw .0; TI X/ \ YT , a solution of the evolutionary problem on 0; T with
v.0/ D v0 ; moreover, for any solution v, the estimates of kvkYT are uniform with
respect to kv0 kX ,
.A2/ there exists a bounded set B0 X with the following properties: if v is an
arbitrary solution with initial condition v0 2 X then
1. there exists t0 D t0 .kv0 kX / such that v.t/ 2 B0 for all t t0 ,
2. if v0 2 B0 then v.t/ 2 B0 for all t 0,
.A3/ each l-trajectory has a unique continuation among all solutions of the
evolution problem which means that from an endpoint of an l-trajectory there
starts at most one solution,
.A4/ for all t > 0, Lt W Xl ! Xl is continuous on Bl0 the set of all l-trajectories
starting at any point of B0 from .A2/,
.A5/ for some > 0, the closure in Xl of the set L .Bl0 / is contained in Bl0 ,
.A6/ there exists a space Wl such that Wl Xl with compact embedding, and
> 0 such that L W Xl ! Wl is Lipschitz continuous on Bl1 the closure of
L .Bl0 / in Xl ,
.A7/ the map e W Xl ! X, e./ D .l/, is continuous on Bl1 ,
.A8/ the map e W Xl ! X is Hlder-continuous on Bl1 .
Theorem 10.2. Let the assumptions .A1/.A5/, .A7/ hold. Then there exists a
global attractor A for the semigroup fS.t/gt0 in X. Moreover, if the assumptions
.A6/, .A8/ are satisfied then the fractal dimension of the attractor is finite.
For the existence of an exponential attractor we need two additional properties,
where now X is a Hilbert space (cf. [168]):
.A9/ for all > 0 the operators Lt W Xl ! Xl are (uniformly with respect to
t 2 0; ) Lipschitz continuous on Bl1 ,
.A10/ for all > 0 there exists c > 0 and 2 .0; 1 such that for all 2 Bl1 and
t1 ; t2 2 0; it holds that
kLt1 Lt2 kXl cjt1 t2 j :
(10.2)
Theorem 10.3. Let X be a separable Hilbert space and let the assumptions .A1/
.A6/ and .A8/.A10/ hold. Then there exists an exponential attractor M for the
semigroup fS.t/gt0 in X.
For the proofs of Theorems 10.2 and 10.3 we refer the readers to corresponding
theorems in [168].
211
in RC ;
(10.3)
div u D 0
(10.4)
on
D RC :
(10.5)
Moreover, we assume the no flux condition across C so that the normal component
of the velocity on C satisfies
un D u n D 0
on
C RC ;
(10.6)
and that the tangential component of the velocity u on C is unknown and satisfies
the Tresca friction law with a constant and positive maximal friction coefficient k.
This means that, cf., e.g., [91, 215],
212
9
>
>
>
>
>
=
>
>
>
>
>
;
on
C RC ;
(10.7)
where U0 e1 D .U0 ; 0/, U0 2 R, is the velocity of the lower surface producing the
driving force of the flow and T is the tangential component of the stress vector on
C given by
T .u; p/ D T.u; p/n ..T.u; p/n/ n/n;
(10.8)
for
x 2 :
(10.9)
with
U.0/ D U0 ;
U.h.x1 // D 0;
x1 2 .0; L/:
(10.10)
The new vector field v is L-periodic in x1 and satisfies the equation of motion
vt v C .v r/v C rp D G.v/;
with
G.v/ D Uv;x1 .v/2 U;x2 e1 C U;x2 x2 e1 ;
(10.11)
213
in RC :
(10.12)
D RC
(10.13)
on
and
vn D v n D 0
on
C RC :
(10.14)
Moreover,
T .v; p/ D T .u; p/ C
@U.x2 /
;0
@x2 x2 D0
on C RC :
@U.x2 /
D 0;
@x2 x2 D0
the Tresca condition (10.7) transforms to
9
>
>
>
>
>
=
>
>
>
>
>
;
on
C RC :
(10.15)
Finally, the initial condition becomes
v.x; 0/ D v0 .x/ D u0 .x/ U.x2 /e1
for x 2 :
(10.16)
on
C RC ; (10.17)
where belongs to a certain set of admissible functions (in our case the tangential
components of the traces on C of functions from the space V defined below) and '
is a convex functional. For '.v / D kjv j the last condition is equivalent to (10.15).
214
v is L-periodic in x1 ;
v n D 0 on C g;
and
V D closure of VQ in H 1 ./2 ;
H D closure of VQ in L2 ./2 :
Z
.u ; v/ D
u.x/ v.x/ dx
and
.ru ; rv/ D
jvj D .v; v/ 2
and
and
Z
.u/ D
C
kju.x1 ; 0/jdx1 D
C
'.u / dS:
with vt 2 L2 .0; TI V 0 /;
215
.ii/ for all in V, and for almost all t in the interval .0; 1/, the following
variational inequality holds
hvt .t/; v.t/i C a.v.t/; v.t// C b.v.t/; v.t/; v.t//
C ./ .v.t// hL .v.t//; v.t/i; (10.18)
.iii/ the following initial condition holds
v.x; 0/ D v0 .x/
for a.e.
x 2 :
(10.19)
(10.20)
Let 2 V. Multiplying (10.20) by v.t/ and using the Green formula we obtain
Z
vt .t/ . v.t// dx C
Z
G.v.t// . v.t// dx
for t 2 .0; T/. As v.t/ and are in V, after some calculations we obtain
Z
Tij .v.t/; p.t//. v.t//i;j dx D a.v.t/ ; v.t//:
(10.21)
(10.22)
By (10.17) with '.v / D kjv j, taking into account the boundary conditions, we get
Z
Z
Tij .v.t/; p.t//nj . v.t//i dS D
T .v.t/; p.t// . v .t// dS
@
C
C
(10.23)
216
Finally,
Z
(10.24)
From (10.22)(10.24) we see that (10.21) yields (10.18), and (10.19) is the same
as (10.16).
Conversely, suppose that v is a sufficiently smooth solution to Problem 10.1. We
have immediately (10.12)(10.14) and (10.16). Let ' be in the space
1
.Hdiv
.//2 D f' 2 V W ' D 0 on @g:
for every
1
' 2 .Hdiv
.//2 :
in
(10.25)
so that (10.11) holds. It follows that p is smooth and without loss of generality we
may assume that it is also L-periodic with respect to x1 . Now, we shall derive the
Tresca boundary condition (10.15) from the weak formulation. We have
Z
C
@
By (10.25) we have (10.20) and so the first integral on the left-hand side vanishes.
Thus we obtain condition (10.23). Due to the fact that n vn .t/ D 0 on C , we
conclude
Z
T.v.t/; p.t//n . v.t//i dS
@
Z
D
C
Z
T .v.t/; p.t// . v .t// dS C
L
and then,
Z
217
L
C
C
C
C
T v dS D
C
kj j dS
C
kjv j dS;
for every
2 V:
(10.28)
(10.29)
Z
C
T dS
kj j dS
C
holds for all 2 L2 .C /. From the above inequality it follows that the pointwise
inequality jT j k must hold a.e. on C . Indeed, if the opposite inequality holds on
a set S of positive measure then we arrive at contradiction by taking D 0 outside
S and D jTT j on S. Now, (10.28) implies that the Tresca condition (10.15) holds
and the proof is complete.
t
u
218
@U.x2 /
D 0;
@x2 x2 D0
and such that
jb.v ; ; v/j
kvk2
4
v 2 V:
for all
Moreover,
jj2 C jrj2 D
(10.30)
Z x1
Z L
@'
@'
2
' .x1 ; x2 / D 2
'.t1 ; x2 / .t1 ; x2 / dt1 2
j'.x1 ; x2 /j
.x1 ; x2 / dx1
@t1
@x1
L
L
and
' 2 .x1 ; x2 / D 2
h
x2
'.x1 ; t2 /
@'
.x1 ; t2 / dt2 2
@t2
h
0
@'
j'.x1 ; x2 /j
.x1 ; x2 / dx2 ;
@x
2
219
whence
k'k4L4 .1 / D
Z
1
sup
0 Lx1 L
Z
4
! Z
L 0x2 h
Z L Z h
@'
@'
dx1 dx2
dx2 dx1 :
j'j
j'j
@x1
@x2
L
L 0
L
4j'j2L2 .1 /
2j'j2L2 .1 /
@'
@x
1 L2 .1 /
@' 2
@x 2
@'
@x
2 L2 .1 /
1 L .1 /
@' 2
C
@x 2
2 L .1 /
2j'j2L2 .1 / jr'j2L2 .1 / :
We use the fact that jrj 1 and the Poincar inequality to get
kvkL4 ./ k'kL4 .1 / ;
j'jL2 .1 / 2jvj;
and
jr'jL2 .1 / Ckvk
t
u
Theorem 10.4. For any v0 2 H and U0 2 R there exists a solution of Problem 10.1.
Proof. We provide only the main steps of the proof as it is quite standard and, on
the other hand, long. The estimates we obtain will be used further in the section.
Observe that the functional is convex, lower semicontinuous (in fact it is
continuous) but nondifferentiable at zero. To overcome this difficulty we use the
following approach (see, e.g., [91, 113, 188]). For > 0 let W V ! R be a
functional defined by
Z
1
V 3 w 7! .w/ D
kjw j1C dx:
1 C C
This functional is convex and lower semicontinuous on V. Moreover, for v ! v
weakly in L2 .0; TI V/,
Z T
Z T
.v .t// dt
.v.t// dt;
lim inf
!0C
and
lim .w/ D .w/
!0C
220
dv .t/
; C a.v .t/; / C b.v .t/; v .t/; / C h0 .v .t//; i
dt
D a.; / b.; v .t/; / b.v .t/; ; /
(10.31)
(10.32)
(10.33)
Z
0
(10.34)
whence
v is bounded in L2 .0; TI V/ \ L1 .0; TI H/ independently of :
(10.35)
is bounded in
L2 .0; TI V 0 /:
(10.36)
221
From (10.35) and (10.36) we conclude that there exists v such that (possibly for a
subsequence)
v ! v weakly in L2 .0; TI V/;
dv
dv
!
weakly in L2 .0; TI V 0 /: (10.37)
dt
dt
(10.38)
(10.39)
From (10.37) it follows that the solution w of Problem 10.1 belongs to L2 .; tI V/.
By (10.39) the map v. / ! v.t/, t > 0, in H is Lipschitz continuous, with
jw.t/ v.t/j Cjw. / v./j
(10.40)
uniformly for t; in a given interval 0; T and initial conditions w.0/; v.0/ in a given
bounded set B in H.
222
(10.41)
kvk2 C kk2
2
we obtain
d 2
jvj C kvk2 C 2.v/ 2kk2 D F:
dt
(10.42)
223
Integration in t gives
jv.t/j2 C
t
0
(10.43)
/ .v/:
(10.44)
Using the Poincar and the trace inequalities we obtain k.v/kL2 .@/ Ckvk, and
Z
Z
.v
/ .v/ D k
C
.jv
j
jv j/ dS k
j
C
j dS
C.C /k k:
(10.45)
(10.46)
kv 0 .t/k2V 0 dt
Z
C2
T
0
kv.t/k2 dtCT C.jv.0/j/:
224
F
:
1
Thus, there exists a bounded absorbing set (e.g., the ball BH .0; / with 2 D 2 F 1 )
S
H
in H. Let B0 be defined as B0 D t0 S.t/BH .0; / . If v0 2 B0 then there exist
sequences tk and vk ! v0 in H such that vk 2 S.tk /BH .0; /. From the continuity of
S.t/ it follows that S.t C tk /BH .0; / 3 S.t/vk ! S.t/v0 in H and hence S.t/v0 2 B0
for all t 0. Thus, .A2/ holds true. Note that we need B0 to be closed in H to be
able to satisfy assumption .A5/ below.
Assumption .A3/. Each l-trajectory has among all solutions a unique continuation.
We recall that by the l-trajectory we mean any solution on the time interval 0; l,
and the unique continuation means that from an endpoint of an l-trajectory there
starts at most one solution. In our case .A3/ is satisfied as the solutions are unique
(Theorem 10.5).
Assumption .A4/. For all t > 0, Lt W Xl ! Xl is continuous on Bl0 .
Bl0 is defined as the set of all l-trajectories starting at any point of B0 from .A2/,
and Xl D L2 .0; lI X/. The semigroup fLt gt0 acts on the set of l-trajectories as the
shifts operators: .Lt /. / D v.t C / for 0 l, where v is the unique solution
on 0; l C such that vj0;l D .
In our case, X D H, hence Xl D Hl D L2 .0; lI H/. In view of inequality (10.40) the
map S.t/ W B0 ! B0 is Lipschitz continuous for every t > 0, whence for any two
1 ; 2 in Bl0 ,
Z
l
0
l
0
(10.47)
d
dk
!
weakly in L2 .0; lI V 0 /: (10.48)
dt
dt
(10.49)
225
We have
h0k .t/; k .t/i C a.k .t/; k .t// C b.k .t/; k .t/; k .t//
C ./ .k .t// hL .k .t// ; k .t/i:
We multiply both sides by a nonnegative smooth function D .t/ with support in
the interval .0; l/ and integrate with respect to t in this interval. We shall prove that
taking lim infk!1 of both sides and using (10.48) and (10.49) we obtain
Z
l
0
C
0
l
0
a..t/; .t//.t/dt
Z
0
l
0
Z
./.t/ dt
..t//.t/ dt
(10.50)
n!1 0
Z
.k .t//.t/dt D
..t//.t/dt:
(10.51)
Let 2 0; 12 . From the fact that H 1 ./ embeds in H 1 ./ compactly, the trace
operator 1 W H 1 ./ ! L2 .@/ is linear and continuous, and from the Ehrling
lemma (cf. Lemma 3.17) for the spaces H 1 ./; H 1 ./, and L2 ./ it follows that
for every " > 0 there exists C" > 0 such that for all v 2 H 1 ./,
k.v/kL2 .@/ "jrvj C C" jvj:
We have thus
k.k / ./k2L2 .C / "kk k2 C C"0 jk j2 ;
and
Z
0
l
0
As, in view of (10.48), there exists M > 0 such that for all n,
Z
0
226
lim sup
0
k!1
lim
k!1 0
(10.52)
k!1 0
h0k ; k i.t/ dt
Z
D lim
k!1 0
D lim
1d
jk j2 .t/ dt
2 dt
k!1 0
D
0
1
jk j2 .t/0 dt D
2
l
0
1 2
jj .t/0 dt
2
In view of (10.48) and (10.49), there are no problems to get the other terms in (10.50)
and finally, (10.50) itself. As inequality (10.50) is equivalent to the inequality
h.t/0 ; i C a..t/; .t// C b..t/; .t/; .t//
C ./ ..t// hL ..t//; .t/i;
satisfied for almost all t 2 .0; l/, is a solution with .0/ in H. To end the proof we
have to show that .0/ belongs to the set B0 . We have k .t/ 2 B0 for all t 2 0; l
and, by (10.49), for a subsequence, k .t/ ! .t/ for almost all t 2 .0; l/. As B0 is
closed, .t/ 2 B0 for almost all t 2 .0; l/. Now, from the continuity of W 0; l ! H
and the closedness of B0 it follows that .0/ is in B0 . Thus, assumption .A5/ holds.
Assumption .A6/. There exists a space Wl such that Wl Xl with compact
embedding, and > 0 such that L W Xl ! Wl is Lipschitz continuous on Bl1 the
closure in Xl of L .Bl0 /.
Define
Wl D fu 2 L2 .0; lI V/ W u0 2 L1 .0; lI U 0 /g;
where U D f 2 V W D 0 on C g. We have, Wl Xl , with compact embedding
and we shall prove that Ll W Xl ! Wl is Lipschitz continuous on Bl1 .
Let w and v be two solutions of Problem 10.1 starting from B0 and let u D w v.
Then, cf. (10.38),
227
d
2
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2 C./4 kw.t/k2 ju.t/j2 :
dt
2
Take s 2 .0; l/ and integrate this inequality over 2 .s; 2l/ to get
Z 2l
Z
2l
2
ju.2l/j2 C
ku. /k2 d C./4
ku. /k2 ju. /j2 d C ju.s/j2 :
2 s
s
(10.53)
From (10.40) we conclude that
ju. /j2 C1 ju.s/j2
for 2 .s; 2l/ and from (10.43) we have
Z 2l
Z 2l
1
ku. /k2 d
.kv./k2 C kw. /k2 / d .jv.0/j2 C jw.0/j2 C 8lF/;
s
0
whence
Z
2l
ku. /k2 d C2
2l
C3
ku. /k d
l
2
ju.s/j2 ds;
and therefore
r
kLl 1 Ll 2 kL2 .0;lIV/
C3
k1 2 kL2 .0;lIH/
l
(10.54)
(10.55)
228
We have
hv 0 ; vi C a.v; v/ C b.v; v; v/ C ./ .v/ hL .v/; vi;
and
hw0 ; wi C a.w; w/ C b.w; w; w/ C ./ .w/ hL .w/; wi:
(10.56)
where
N .u; w; vI / D b.; u; / C b.u; ; / C a.u; / C b.w; u; / C b.u; v; /:
Estimating the right-hand side of (10.56) we get
hu0 ; i C00 .1 C kvk C kwk/kuk k k;
whence
ku0 .t/kU0 D supfhu0 .t/; i W k k 1g C00 .1 C kv.t/k C kw.t/k/ku.t/k:
Finally, integration over t 2 .0; l/ gives
Z
0
Z
ku.t/k2 dt
1=2
with
C000 D C0
Z
l
0
.1 C kv.t/k2 C kw.t/k2 / dt
1=2
with a constant
C0 > 0;
uniformly for trajectories starting from B0 . This proves (10.55) and ends the proof
of the Lipschitz continuity of the map Ll W Xl ! Wl . Assumption .A6/ holds true.
Assumption .A8/. The map e W Xl ! X is Hlder-continuous on Bl1 .
Assumption .A8/ follows directly from the Lipschitz continuity of the map
e W Xl ! X, e./ D .l/. To check the latter, let w; v be two solutions as above,
starting from B0 . From (10.40) we have, in particular,
jw.l/ v.l/j Cjw. / v./j
229
for 2 .0; l/. Integrating this inequality in on the interval .0; l/ we obtain
C
jw.l/ v.l/j p kw vkL2 .0;lIH/ :
l
t
u
(10.57)
holds for all > 0, 0 t2 t1 , 2 Bl1 , some c > 0 and some 2 .0; 1,
where, in our case, Xl D Hl .
To obtain (10.57) it suffices to know that 0 , the time derivatives of 2 Bl1 , are
uniformly bounded in Lq .0; lI H/ for some 1 < q 1, cf. [168]. In fact, we have
then
jLt1 .s/ Lt2 .s/j D ju.t1 C s/ u.t2 C s/j
Z t1 Cs
0
D
u ./ d
t2 Cs
for all
2 Bl1 :
The formal a priori estimates that follow can be performed on the smooth in the
time variable Galerkin approximations vn .t/, n D 1; 2; 3; : : :, of the regularized
problem (10.31)(10.32), as in [148]. The obtained estimates are preserved by
solutions v .t/ of problem (10.31)(10.32), with bounds independent of when
! 0, and in the end, by solutions v.t/ of Problem 10.1.
230
Let us consider the solution v D v.t/ of problem (10.31)(10.32) (we drop the
subscript for short),
dv.t/
; C a.v.t/; / C b.v.t/; v.t/; / C h0 .v.t//; i
dt
D a.; / b.; v.t/; / b.v.t/; ; /;
(10.58)
d
d
kvk2 C .v/ D hL .v/; vt i b.v; v; vt /:
dt 2
dt
(10.59)
(10.61)
d 0
.v/; vt 0:
dt
Using Lemma 10.1 and the Ladyzhenskaya inequality (10.30) to estimate the righthand side of (10.61) we obtain
d
jvt j2 C kvt k2 c2 kvk2 jvt j2 :
dt
(10.62)
(10.63)
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
231
To get rid of the last term on the right-hand side we add to (10.63) Eq. (10.59)
multiplied by 2t. After simple calculations and using (10.60) we obtain
d 2 2
.t jvt j C tkvk2 C 2t .v// C t2 kvt k2
dt
2tc1 .kvt k C kvkjvt j1=2 kvt k1=2 C jvj1=2 kvk1=2 jvt j1=2 kvt k1=2 /
C c2 kvk2 .t2 jvt j2 / C kvk2 C 2 .v/
C c3 jvj1=2 kvk3=2 .tjvt j/1=2 .tkvt k/1=2 :
(10.64)
Define y D t2 jvt j2 Ctkvk2 C2t .v/. Using the Young inequality to the right-hand
side of (10.64) and observing that .v/ C.kvk2 C 1/ for 0 < 1, we obtain
the inequality of the form
t2
d
y.t/ C
kvt k2 C1 .t/y.t/ C C2 .t/;
dt
2
where the coefficients Ci ./, i D 1; 2, are locally integrable and do not depend on .
They are also independent of the initial conditions for v in a given bounded sets in H.
This proves that the time derivative of solutions of the regularized problems is
uniformly bounded with respect to in L1 .; TI H/ \ L2 .; TI V/ for all intervals
; T, 0 < < T. As a consequence, this property holds for all 2 Bl1 . In view
of the above considerations this ends the proof of the existence of an exponential
attractor.
t
u
in RC ;
(10.65)
232
in RC
(10.66)
in domain given by
D fx D .x1 ; x2 / W 0 < x1 < L; 0 < x2 < h.x1 /g;
with boundary @ D D [C [L , where D is the top part of the boundary given by
D D f.x1 ; h.x1 // W x1 2 .0; L/g, C is the bottom part of the boundary given by
C D .0; L/ f0g, and L is the lateral one given by L D f0; Lg .0; h.0//.
The function h is smooth and L-periodic such that h.x1 / " > 0 for all x1 2 R
with a constant " > 0. We will use the notation e1 D .1; 0/ and e2 D .0; 1/ for
the canonical basis of R2 . Note that on C the outer normal unit vector is given by
n D e2 .
The unknowns are the velocity field v W RC ! R2 and the pressure field
p W RC ! R, > 0 is the viscosity coefficient and f W ! R2 is the mass
force density. The stress tensor T is related to the velocity and pressure through the
linear constitutive law Tij D pij C .vi;j C vj;i /.
We are looking for the solutions of (10.65)(10.66) which are L-periodic in the
2 ;t/
2 ;t/
sense that v.0; x2 ; t/ D v.L; x2 ; t/, @v2 .0;x
D @v2 .L;x
, and p.0; x2 ; t/ D p.L; x2 ; t/
@x1
@x1
C
for x2 2 0; h.0/ and t 2 R . The first condition represents the L-periodicity of
velocities, while the latter two ones, the L-periodicity of the Cauchy stress vector
Tn on L in the space of divergence free functions. Moreover we assume that
vD0
on
D RC :
(10.67)
On the contact boundary C we decompose the velocity into the normal component
vn D v n and the tangential one v D v e1 . Note that since the domain is
two-dimensional it is possible to consider the tangential components as scalars, for
the sake of the ease of notation. Likewise, we decompose the stress on the boundary
C into its normal component Tn D Tn n and the tangential one T D Tn e1 .
We assume that there is no flux across C and hence
vn D 0 on
C RC :
(10.68)
on
C RC ;
(10.69)
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
233
while if there is a slip, then the friction force is given by the expression
v U0 ) T D k.jv U0 j/
v U0
jv U0 j
C RC :
on
(10.70)
Note that (10.69)(10.70) generalize the Tresca law considered in Sect. 10.2, where
k was assumed to be a constant. Here k depends on the slip rate, this dependence
represents the fact that the kinetic friction is less than the static one, which holds
if k is a decreasing function. Similar friction law is used, for example, in the study
of the motion of tectonic plates, see [119, 190, 207] and the references therein. We
make the following assumptions on the friction coefficient k:
.k1/ k 2 C.RC I RC /,
.k2/ k.s/ .1 C s/ for all s 2 RC with > 0,
.k3/ k.s/ k.r/ .s r/ for all s > r 0 with > 0.
Note that the assumption that k has values in RC has a clear physical interpretation,
namely it means that the friction force is dissipative.
Finally, the initial condition for the velocity field is
v.x; 0/ D v0 .x/
x 2 :
for
(10.71)
In the next section we present a weak formulation of the problem in the form of
an evolutionary differential inclusion with a suitable potential corresponding to the
generalized Tresca condition.
v is L-periodic in x1 ;
vn D 0 on C g;
and
V D closure of VQ in H 1 ./2 ;
H D closure of VQ in L2 ./2 :
Z
.u ; v/ D
u.x/v.x/ dx
and
.ru ; rv/ D
234
jvj D .v; v/ 2
and
and
jvU0 j
j.v/ D
k.s/ ds:
(10.72)
Note that the functional j is not necessarily convex, but it is locally Lipschitz. By @j
we will denote its Clarke subdifferential (see Sect. 3.7). The variational formulation
of problem (10.65)(10.71) can be derived by the calculation analogous to the proof
of Proposition 10.1.
Problem 10.2. Given v0 2 H and f 2 H, find v W RC ! H such that:
2
2
.i/ v 2 C.RC I H/ \ Lloc
.RC I V/, with vt 2 Lloc
.RC I V 0 /,
C
.ii/ for all in V and for almost all t 2 R , the following equality holds
v.0/ D v0 :
(10.74)
The above definition is justified by the assertion .i/ of the following lemma.
Lemma 10.3. Under assumptions .k1/.k3/ the functional j defined by (10.72)
satisfies the following properties:
.i/ j is locally Lipschitz and conditions (10.69)(10.70) are equivalent to
T 2 @j.v /;
.ii/ jj .1
Q C jwj/ for all w 2 R and 2 @j.w/, Q > 0,
(10.75)
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
235
.iii/ m.@j/ , where m.@j/ is the one sided Lipschitz constant defined by
m.@j/ D
inf
u;v2R;uv;
[email protected]/;[email protected]/
. / .u v/
;
ju vj2
.iv/ for all w 2 R and 2 @j.w/, w .1 C jwj/, with a constant > 0.
Proof. .i/ The fact that j is locally Lipschitz follows from the continuity of k and
the direct calculation. To see that (10.69)(10.70) is equivalent to (10.75) observe
that for v U0 the functional j is continuously differentiable on a neighborhood
vU0
of v and its derivative is given as j0 .v/ D k.jv U0 j/ jvU
, whence (10.70) is
0j
equivalent to (10.75) by the characterization of the Clarke subdifferential given
in Theorem 3.19. The same characterization implies that (10.69) is equivalent
to (10.75) if v D U0 .
Assertion .ii/ follows in a straightforward way from .k2/.
Assertion .iii/ can be obtained by a following computation. Let 2 @j.u/,
2 @j.v/, where u U0 and v U0 . Then
u U0
v U0
k.jv U0 j/
.u v/
. / .u v/ D k.ju U0 j/
ju U0 j
jv U0 j
D k.ju U0 j/ju U0 j k.ju U0 j/
k.jv U0 j/
.u U0 / .v U0 /
ju U0 j
.u U0 / .v U0 /
C k.jv U0 j/jv U0 j
jv U0 j
w U0
.w U0 C U0 /
jw U0 j
t
u
Remark 10.1. Observe that assertion .iii/ of Lemma 10.3 is equivalent to the claim
2
that the functional j is semiconvex, i.e., the functional s ! j.s/ C s2 is in fact
convex (see Definition 10 in [18]).
236
s20;t
t
0
t
0
(10.76)
(10.77)
3
jf j2
2
C kv.t/k
Q
Q 1 .C /;
L2 .C / C m
4"
2
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
237
for
u; z 2 V:
(10.78)
Hence (10.77) follows by (10.76) and the straightforward computation that uses the
assertion .ii/ of Lemma 10.3 to estimate the multivalued term.
t
u
We formulate and prove the theorem on existence of solutions to Problem 10.2.
Theorem 10.8. For any u0 2 H Problem 10.2 has at least one solution.
Proof. Since the proof of solution existence, based on the Galerkin method, is
standard and quite long, we provide only its main steps.
R1
Let % 2 C01 ..1; 1// be a mollifier such that 1 %.s/ ds D 1 and %.s/ 0.
%k W R ! R by %k .x/ D k%.kx/ for k 2 N and x 2 R. Then supp %k
We1define
k ; 1k . We consider jk W R ! R defined by the convolution
Z
%k .s/j.r s/ ds for r 2 R:
(10.79)
jk .r/ D
R
Note that jk 2 C1 .R/. From the assertion .B/ of Theorem 3.21 it follows that for
all n 2 N and r 2 R we have jj0k .r/j .1 C jrj/, where is different from Q in .ii/
of Lemma 10.3 above but independent of k.
Let us furthermore take the sequence Vk of finite dimensional spaces such that
Vk D spanfz1 ; : : : ; zk g, where fzi g are orthonormal in H eigenfunctions of the Stokes
operator with the Dirichlet and periodic boundary conditions given in the definition
S1
of the space V. Then fVk g1
kD1 Vk D V.
kD1 approximate V from inside, i.e.,
0
We
denote
by
P
W
V
!
V
the
orthogonal
projection
on
V
defined
as Pk u D
k
k
k
Pk
hu;
z
iz
.
Using
Theorem
3.17
we
conclude
that
P
v
!
v
strongly
in V 0 for
i
i
k
iD1
0
any v 2 V .
We formulate the regularized Galerkin problems for k 2 N.
Find vk 2 C.RC I Vk / such that for a.e. t 2 RC , vk is differentiable and
hvk0 .t/; i C a.vk .t/; / C b.vk .t/; vk .t/; /
C .j0k .vn .t/.//; /L2 .C / D .f ; /;
vk .0/ D Pk v0
for a.e. t 2 RC and all 2 Vk .
(10.80)
(10.81)
238
Note that due to the fact that j0k ; a; b are smooth, the solution of (10.80)(10.81), if it
exists, is a continuously differentiable function of time variable, with values in Vk .
We first show that if vk solves (10.80) then estimates analogous to the ones in
Lemma 10.4 hold. Taking vk .t/ in place of in (10.80) and using the argument
similar to that in the proof of (10.76) in Lemma 10.4 we obtain that, for a given
T > 0,
kvk kL1 .0;TIH/ const;
(10.82)
(10.83)
(10.84)
Since, by Theorem 3.17, for w 2 V 0 we have kPk wkV 0 kwkV 0 , then, using the
estimate kBwkV 0 Cjwjkwk valid for w 2 V, the growth condition on j0k as well
as (10.82) and (10.83), from Eq. (10.84) we get
kvk0 kL2 .0;TIV 0 / const:
(10.85)
The existence of the solution to the Galerkin problem (10.80) follows by the
Carathodory theorem and estimates (10.82)(10.83).
Since the bounds (10.82), (10.83), and (10.85) are independent of k then, for a
subsequence, we get
vk ! v
vk ! v
vk0 ! v 0
weakly in L2 .0; TI V 0 /;
vk ! v
vk ! v
(10.86)
(10.87)
weakly in
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
239
In a standard way (see, for example, Sects. 7.4.3 and 9.4 in [197]) we can pass to
the limit in (10.84) and obtain that v and satisfy (10.73) for a.e. t 2 .0; T/. The
2
assertion .C/ of Theorem 3.21 implies that .t/ 2 [email protected]
for a.e. t 2 .0; T/.
.t//
We shall show that v.0/ D v0 in H. We have, for t 2 .0; T/,
Z
vk .t/ D Pk v0 C
v.t/ D v.0/ C
t
0
v 0 .s/ ds;
T
0
D
0
Z
hPk v0 v.0/; i dt C
Z
D ThPk v0 v.0/; i C
T
0
Z
0
(10.88)
240
Proof. Let v and w be two solutions of Problem 10.2 with the initial conditions v0
and w0 . We denote u.t/ D v.t/ w.t/. Subtracting (10.73) for v and w, respectively,
and taking u.t/ as a test function we get, for a.e. t 2 RC ,
1d
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2 C b.u.t/; w.t/; u.t// C ..t/ .t/; v.t/ w.t/ /L2 .C / D 0;
2 dt
2
2
and .t/ 2 [email protected]
.
where .t/ 2 [email protected]
.t//
.t//
Using estimate (10.78) to estimate the convective term and also assertion .iii/ in
Lemma 10.3 to estimate the multivalued one we get, for a.e. t 2 RC ,
1d
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2 ku .t/k2L2 .C / Cju.t/jku.t/kkw.t/k:
2 dt
(10.89)
As in the proof of Lemma 10.4 we use the fact that the embedding V Z is compact
and the trace C W Z ! L2 .C /2 is continuous. We get, for a.e. t 2 RC ,
1d
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2 "ku.t/k2 C C."/ju.t/j2 kw.t/k2
2 dt
C kC k2 ."ku.t/k2 C C."/ju.t/j2 /
(10.90)
with an arbitrary " > 0 and the constant C."/ > 0 independent on u, w, and t. By
choosing " > 0 small enough we get
d
ju.t/j2 ju.t/j2 .C1 kw.t/k2 C C2 /
dt
for a.e.
t 2 RC ;
with the constants C1 ; C2 > 0. The Gronwall inequality (cf. Lemma 3.20) gives
ju.t/j2 ju.s/j2 eC2 .ts/CC1
Rt
s
kw. /k2 d
Rt
0
kw. /k2 d
(10.91)
and the proof of (10.88) is complete. Taking s D 0 and v.0/ D w.0/ in (10.88) we
obtain the uniqueness.
t
u
Now we shall prove that assertion .iv/ of Lemma 10.3 gives additional, dissipative,
a priori estimates.
Lemma 10.6. If v is a solution of Problem 10.2 with the initial condition v0 , then,
jv.t/j jv0 jeC1 t C C2
for all
t 0;
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
241
Proof. We proceed as in the proof of (10.76) in Lemma 10.3. Taking the test
function D v.t/ in (10.73) we get
1d
jv.t/j2 C kv.t/k2 C ..t/; v .t//L2 .C / jf jjv.t/j
2 dt
for a.e. t 2 RC . We use assertion .iv/ of Lemma 10.3 and the Poincar inequality
1 jvj2 kvk2 to get
1d
1
jv.t/j2 C kv.t/k2 L 1 C
"1 kv .t/k2L2 .C /
2 dt
4"1
jf j2
"2
C kv.t/k2
4"2
1
for a.e. t 2 RC , with an arbitrary "1 > 0 and "2 > 0. Using the trace inequality and
the Poincar inequality again, we can choose "1 and "2 small enough to get
d
jv.t/j2 C 1 jv.t/j2 C
dt
for a.e. t 2 RC , where C > 0 is a constant. Finally, the assertion follows from the
Gronwall inequality (cf. Lemma 3.20).
t
u
242
where jB0 j D supv2B0 jvj. Hence, denoting 1 D uj0;l and 2 D vj0;l , we get
kLt 1 Lt 2 k2Xl D2 .t C l; jB0 j/k1 2 k2Xl ;
(10.92)
Assumption .A5/. We need to prove that, for some > 0, L .Bl0 / Bl0 .
Let u0 2 B0 . From the fact that for all > 0, S. /u0 2 B0 , it follows that
L .Bl0 / Bl0 . To obtain the assertion we must show that Bl0 is closed in Xl . To this
end assume that uk is a sequence of solutions to Problem 10.2 such that uk .0/ 2 B0
and that
k ! strongly in L2 .0; lI H/;
(10.93)
(10.94)
0k ! 0
weakly in L2 .0; lI V 0 /:
(10.95)
We shall show that 2 Bl0 . Let us first prove that .0/ 2 B0 . Indeed, from (10.93)
it follows that, for a subsequence, k .t/ ! .t/ strongly in H for a.e. t 2 .0; l/.
Since k .t/ 2 B0 for all k 2 N and all t 2 0; l, then .t/ belongs to the closed set
B0 for a.e. t 2 .0; l/. The closedness of B0 and the fact that 2 C.0; lI H/ imply
that .t/ 2 B0 for all t 2 0; l and, in particular, .0/ 2 B0 . We need to prove that
satisfies (10.73) for a.e. t 2 .0; l/. It is enough to show that for all w 2 L2 .0; lI V 0 /,
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
l
0
243
hA.t/; w.t/i dt
hB.t/; w.t/i dt C
Z
..t/; w .t//L2 .C / dt D
l
0
.f ; w.t// dt
(10.96)
2
with .t/ 2 S@j.
for a.e. t 2 .0; l/. From the fact that k satisfies (10.73) for a.e.
.t//
t 2 .0; l/ we have
Z
0
l
0
Z
.k .t/; w .t//L2 .C / dt D
.f ; w.t// dt;
(10.97)
2
with k .t/ 2 S@j.
for a.e. t 2 .0; l/. Then, from the growth condition .ii/ in
k .t//
p
p
Lemma 10.3 it follows that kk kL2 .0;lIL2 .C // 2lLQ C 2k
Q k kL2 .0;lIL2 .C // .
Since k is bounded in L2 .0; lI V/, then k is bounded in L2 .0; lI L2 .C // and hence
k is bounded in the same space. Therefore, for a subsequence,
k !
(10.98)
Now (10.93), (10.94), and (10.98) are sufficient to pass to the limit in all the terms
2
for a.e.
in (10.97) and thus to prove (10.96). It remains to show that .t/ 2 S@j.
n .t//
1
2
1
t 2 .0; l/. Let Z D V \H ./ be equipped with H
topology, where 2 0; 12 .
Then for the triple V Z V 0 we can use the AubinLions compactness theorem
and conclude from (10.93) and (10.94) that k ! strongly in L2 .0; lI Z/. Now,
since the trace operator C W Z ! L2 .C /2 is linear and continuous, and so is the
corresponding Nemytskii operator,
k !
strongly in
(10.99)
We use assertion .H2/ in Theorem 3.24 to deduce that .x; t/ 2 @j. .x; t// a.e. in
C .0; l/. This completes the proof of .A5/.
Assumption .A6/. We define W D H01 ./2 \ V, where we equip W with the norm
of V. Then V 0 W 0 . By the AubinLions compactness theorem the space
Wl D f 2 L2 .0; lI V/ W 0 2 L1 .0; TI W 0 /g
is embedded compactly in Xl . We must show that the shift operator L W Xl ! Wl
Xl
is Lipschitz continuous on Bl1 D L .Bl0 / for some > 0. In fact, we shall prove
that L is Lipschitz continuous on the larger set Bl0 for D l. Indeed, let w; v be two
solutions of Problem 10.2 starting from B0 . Denote u D v w. Then, by (10.90),
244
d
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2 Cju.t/j2 .1 C kw.t/k2 /
dt
for a.e.
t 2 RC ;
where the constant C depends only on the problem data. We fix s 2 .0; l/ and
integrate the last inequality over interval .s; 2l/ to obtain
ju.2l/j2 C
2l
ku.t/k2 dt C
2l
2l
Z
ku.t/k ju.s/j 2Cl;B0 l C Cl;B0
2
2l
kw.t/k dt C 1 :
2
Since, by .A1/,
Z
2l
kw.t/k2 dt Cl;B0 ;
it follows that
Z
2l
Integrating this inequality over interval .0; l/ with respect to the variable s it follows
that
Z
l
2l
ku.t/k dt Cl;B0
ju.s/j2 ds;
and therefore
r
kLl v Ll wkL2 .0;lIV/
Cl;B0
kv wkXl :
l
(10.100)
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
245
To this end, we subtract (10.73) for w and v, respectively, and take 2 W as a test
function. We get
hu0 .t/; i C hAu.t/; i C hBv.t/ Bw.t/; i D 0:
We have, for a constant k > 0 dependent only on the problem data,
hBv.t/ Bw.t/; i D b.u.t/; w.t/; / C b.w.t/; u.t/; / C b.u.t/; u.t/; /
k.ku.t/kkw.t/k C ku.t/k2 /kk
k.2kw.t/k C kv.t/k/ku.t/kkk;
whence, for a constant C > 0 dependent only on the problem data,
ku0 .t/kW 0 D
sup
2W;kkD1
s
Z
l
0
s 2 .0; l/:
whence
Cl;B0
jw.l/ v.l/j p kw vkXl ;
l
and .A8/ holds.
246
This completes the proof Theorem 10.9 about the existence of the global attractor
of a finite fractal dimension.
t
u
In the following subsection we shall prove the existence of an exponential attractor.
Since Bl1 D L .Bl0 / for certain > 0, it is enough to prove the assertion for
2 L .Bl0 /. Let v be the unique solution of Problem 10.2 on 0; C l C t0 with
v.0/ 2 B0 such that vj; Cl D . It is enough to obtain the uniform bound on v 0 in
the space L1 .; C l C t0 I H/. Indeed,
s
kLt1 Lt2 kXl D
Z
0
s
Z l Z
0
CsCt2
CsCt1
2
jv 0 .r/j dr
ds
p
jt1 t2 j lkv 0 kL1 .;ClCt0 IH/ :
The a priori estimate will be computed for the smooth solutions of the regularized
Galerkin problem (10.80)(10.81) formulated in the proof of Theorem 10.8. We
shall show that, for the Galerkin approximations vk , for any T > , the functions
vk0 are bounded in L1 .; TI H/ independently of k and, in consequence, the desired
estimate will be preserved by their limit v, a solution of Problem 10.2.
The argument follows the lines of the proof of Theorem 10.7 (compare [148]).
First we take D vk0 .t/ in (10.80) which gives us
10.3 Planar Shear Flows with Generalized Tresca Type Friction Law
jvk0 .t/j2 C
247
1d
kvk .t/k2 C b.vk .t/; vk .t/; vk0 .t//
2 dt
Z
d
C
jk .vk .x; t// dS D .f ; vk0 .t//:
dt C
d
d
kvk .t/k2 C 2
dt
dt
Z
C
(10.101)
1
d 0
0
0
jk .vk .x; t// vk
.x; t/ jvk
.x; t/j2
dt
We differentiate both sides of (10.80) with respect to time and take D vk0 .t/,
which gives us
1d 0 2
jv .t/j C kvk0 .t/k2 C
2 dt k
Z
C
d 0
0
jk .vk .x; t// vk
.x; t/ dS
dt
C b.vk0 .t/; vk .t/; vk0 .t// C b.vk .t/; vk0 .t/; vk0 .t// D 0:
Using (10.102) and the fact that b.vk .t/; vk0 .t/; vk0 .t// D 0 we get
1d 0 2
0
jv .t/j C kvk0 .t/k2 kvk
.t/k2L2 .C / C b.vk0 .t/; vk .t/; vk0 .t// 0:
2 dt k
Proceeding exactly as in the proof of (10.89) we get, for an arbitrary " > 0 and a
constant C."/ > 0,
1d 0 2
jv .t/j C kvk0 .t/k2 C."/kvk .t/k2 jvk0 .t/j2
2 dt k
C "kvk0 .t/k2 C C."/jvk0 .t/j2 ;
248
whence
d 0 2
jv .t/j C kvk0 .t/k2 Cjvk0 .t/j2 .kvk .t/k2 C 1/:
dt k
Multiplying this inequality by t2 we get
d 2 0 2
.t jvk .t/j / C t2 kvk0 .t/k2 Ct2 jvk0 .t/j2 .kvk .t/k2 C 1/ C 2tjvk0 .t/j2 :
dt
We add this inequality to inequality
R (10.101) multiplied by 2t to obtain, after simple
calculations that use the fact that C jk .vk .x; t// dS C.1 C kvk .t/k2 /,
Z
d 2 0 2
t jvk .t/j C 2tkvk0 .t/k2 C 4t
jk .vk .x; t// dS C t2 kvk0 .t/k2
dt
C
C1 kvk .t/k2 .tjvk0 .t/j/2 C C2 .tjvk0 .t/j/2 C C3 C C4 kvk .t/k2
1
Z
C
using the bound of Lemma 10.6 for jvk .t/j, Young inequality, and the fact that jk
assumes nonnegative values, we get
d
yk .t/ C t2 kvk0 .t/k2 C6 kvk .t/k2 C C2 yk .t/ C C3 C C7 kvk .t/k2 ;
dt
2
where C6 ; C7 > 0. Finally, the Gronwall inequality (cf. Lemma 3.20) and the bound
RT
in (10.76) of Lemma 10.4 for 0 kvk .s/k2 ds yield the uniform boundedness of vk0
in L1 .; TI H/ \ L2 .; TI V/ for all intervals ; T, 0 < < T. This completes the
proof of .A10/ and thus the existence of an exponential attractor for the semigroup
fS.t/gt0 associated with Problem 10.2.
t
u
249
250
11
div u D 0;
@v
C v C .v r/v C rq D g;
@t
div v D 0;
and
251
252
and let
u.x; t/ D
1
X
uO k .t/!k .x/;
Pm u.x; t/ D
kD1
m
X
uO k .t/!k .x/;
kD1
and
v.x; t/ D
1
X
vO k .t/!k .x/;
Pm v.x; t/ D
kD1
m
X
vO k .t/!k .x/;
kD1
t ! 1:
(11.1)
Definition 11.1. Let (11.1) hold. Then the first m modes associated with Pm are
called the determining modes if the condition
Z
t!1
implies
Z
t ! 1:
(11.2)
Remark 11.1. Relation (11.2) implies further a similar convergence in the norm
of V.
Let
Z
lim sup
t!1
jf .x; t/j2 dx
1=2
D F:
We shall give the explicit estimate of the number m of determining modes in terms
of the Grashof number G, which is a nondimensional parameter, defined here as
GD
F
1 2
n D 2:
253
Theorem 11.1. Suppose that m 2 N is such that m cG2 where G is the Grashof
number, G D 1F 2 , and c is a constant depending only on the shape of . Then the
first m modes are determining (in the sense defined above) for the two-dimensional
NavierStokes system with non-slip boundary conditions.
Proof. The proof is based on the generalized Gronwall lemma (Lemma 3.23),
cf. [99]. We shall apply the lemma to .t/ D jQm w.t/j2 , where w.t/ D u.t/ v.t/ is
the difference of the two solutions and Qm D I Pm , showing that if m is sufficiently
large and jPm w.t/j ! 0 together with jf .t/ g.t/j ! 0 as t ! 1 then (3.36) holds.
We have the following equation for the difference of solutions,
dw
C Aw C B.w; u/ C B.v; w/ D f .t/ g.t/:
dt
Taking the inner product with Qm w in H we obtain
1d
jQm wj2 C kQm wk2 C b.w; u; Qm w/ C b.v; w; Qm w/
2 dt
D .f .t/ g.t/; Qm w/:
(11.3)
(11.4)
We estimate the first term on the right-hand side using the Ladyzhenskaya inequality (3.8) to get
jb.Pm w; u; Qm w/j D jb.Pm w; Qm w; u/j
c1 jPm wj1=2 kPm wk1=2 juj1=2 kuk1=2 kQm wk:
The second term on the right-hand side of (11.4) is estimated similarly to the first
term, obtaining
jb.Qm w; u; Qm w/j c1 jQm wjkQm wkkuk
c21
jQm wj2 kuk2 C kQm wk2 :
2
2
Observe that
jb.v; w; Qm w/j D jb.v; Pm w; Qm w/j
c1 jvj1=2 kvk1=2 jPm wj1=2 kPm wk1=2 kQm wk:
254
1=2
1=2
kvk
jPm wj
1=2
1=2
kPm wk
(11.5)
We use
mC1 jQm wj2 kQm wk2
(11.6)
c21
ku.t/k2 ;
2
and
D 2 fthe right-hand side of (11.5)g:
We shall check the conditions of the generalized Gronwall lemma (i.e.,
Lemma 3.23). The existence of uniquely determined u and v follows from
Theorem 7.2. Remark 7.2 implies that both u and v belong to L2 .; TI D.A//
for all 0 < < T < 1. Now, as f ; g 2 L1 .RC I H/ we use an argument based
on the enstrophy estimate and the uniform Gronwall inequality, similar as in the
proof of Theorem 7.4, to deduce that the solutions u.t/ and v.t/ are uniformly
bounded in t away from zero in both H and V norms (for the initial conditions in
H), see Exercise 7.25. Therefore, if jPm w.t/j ! 0 and jf .t/ g.t/j ! 0 as t ! 1
then from inequality (11.5) it follows that .t/ ! 0 as t ! 1, which implies
condition (3.35).
Second, from the energy equation
1
ju.t/j2 C
2
t0
ku.s/k2 ds D
1
ju.t0 /j2 C
2
t
t0
.f .s/; u.s//ds;
255
tCT
ku.s/k2 ds
2
kf k2L1 .t;tCTIH/
2 1
for large
T:
(11.7)
1
T
tCT
./d m
m
c21
1
lim sup
t!1 T
tCT
ku. /k2 d
2c21 F 2
:
3 1
2c21 F 2
;
4 1
(11.8)
t ! 1:
256
take the inner product with AQm w in H (we know that u.t/ 2 D.A/ for t > 0) to
obtain
1d
kQm wk2 C kQm Awk2 C b.w; u; AQm w/ C b.v; w; AQm w/
2 dt
D .f .t/ g.t/; AQm w/;
and then proceed as above using further properties (as these in Exercises 11.3
and 11.4) of solutions of two-dimensional NavierStokes equations with spaceperiodic boundary conditions.
t
u
Exercise 11.3. Prove that for u; v 2 D.A/
b.v; u; Au/ C b.u; v; Au/ C b.u; u; Av/ D 0:
Exercise 11.4. Prove that
1
T
tCT
jAu.s/j2 ds
2
kf k2L1 .t;tCTIH/
2
for large T:
div u D 0;
@v
C v C .v r/v C rq D g;
@t
div v D 0;
and
257
with the same homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions; p; q and f ; g are the
corresponding pressures and external forces, respectively.
We assume that the forcing terms f and g, f ; g 2 L1 .0; 1I H/, have the same
asymptotic behavior as time goes to infinity,
Z
as
t ! 1:
jD1;:::;N
as
t ! 1:
(11.9)
as
t ! 1:
Denote
.w/ D max jw.xj /j:
1jN
To prove the existence of a finite number of determining nodes we shall use the
generalized Gronwall lemma (cf. Lemma 3.23) as well as inequality (11.10) of the
following lemma.
Lemma 11.1. Let the domain be covered by N identical squares. Consider the
set E D fx1 ; : : : ; xN g of points in , distributed one in each square. Then for each
vector field w in D.A/ the following inequalities hold,
c
c
.w/2 C 2 2 jAwj2 ;
1
1 N
c
kwk2 cN.w/2 C
jAwj2 ;
1 N
c
jAwj2 ;
kwk2L1 ./ cN.w/2 C
1 N
jwj2
(11.10)
258
as
t ! 1;
and let
F D lim sup jf .t/j D lim sup jg.t/j as
t!1
t ! 1:
t!1
t ! 1:
(11.11)
259
Exercise 11.5. Prove the above two inequalities by using the following Agmon
inequality:
kuk1 c2 juj1=2 jAuj1=2
for
u 2 D.A/:
(11.12)
3
jAuj2 C
jf gj2 :
6
2
(11.13)
3
jf gj2 C 1 N 2 .w/2 :
where
D kw.t/k2 :
(11.14)
We see that
.t/ ! 0 as
t ! 1;
and hence
1
t!1 T
tCT
lim
C . /d D 0:
(11.15)
t ! jv.t/j
(11.16)
As the functions
t ! ku.t/k
and
260
tCT
t
(11.17)
we deduce that
1
lim inf
t!1 T
tCT
tCT
./d > 0:
(11.18)
. /d < 1:
(11.19)
Also
lim sup
t!1
1
T
tCT
In view of (11.14) together with (11.15), (11.18), and (11.19) we deduce that
.t/ D kw.t/k ! 0
as
t ! 1:
t
u
! 2 ,
for all ! 2
and all
t; 2 R:
The mappings
t are called the shift operators.
Let moreover X be a metric space with the distance d.; /; and let be a
cocycle on X, i.e., a mapping W RC X ! X; which satisfies:
261
The
-cocycle is said to be continuous if for all .t; !/ 2 RC , the mapping
.t; !; / W X ! X is continuous.
The sets parameterized by the index ! 2 will be called the parameterized sets
b D fD.!/g!2 , while their particular case, the sets parameterized by
and denoted D
time t 2 R will be called the non-autonomous sets and denoted D D fD.t/gt2R : This
different notation stresses the special case D R and
t s D sCt. Let P.X/ denote
the family of all nonempty subsets of X, and S the class of all parameterized sets
b D fD.!/g!2 such that D.!/ 2 P.X/ for all ! 2 . We say that the fibers
D
b are nonempty.
D.!/ of the parameterized set D
We consider a given nonempty subclass D S : This class will be called an
attraction universe.
Definition 11.2. The
-cocycle is said to be pullback D-asymptotically compact
b 2 D, and any sequences tn ! C1, xn 2
.D-a.c./ if for any ! 2 , any D
D.
tn !/; the sequence .tn ;
tn !; xn / has a convergent subsequence.
b D fB.!/g!2 2 S is said to be pullback
Definition 11.3. A parameterized set B
b
b 0 such that
D-absorbing if for each ! 2 and D 2 D, there exists t0 .!; D/
.t;
t !; D.
t !// B.!/
for all
b
t t0 .!; D/:
for
C1 ; C2 X:
t!C1
b 2 D; ! 2 :
D
for any
.t; !/ 2 RC :
Remark 11.2. Observe that Definition 11.5 does not guarantee the uniqueness of a
pullback D-attractor (see [36] for a discussion on this point). In order to ensure the
262
uniqueness one needs to impose additional conditions as, for instance, the condition
that the attractor belongs to the same attraction universe D, or some kind of
minimality. However, we do not include this stronger assumptions in the definition
since, as we will show in Theorem 11.4, under very general hypotheses, it is possible
to ensure the existence of a global pullback D-attractor which is minimal in an
appropriate sense.
b 2 S and ! 2 ; we define the !-limit set of D
b at
Definition 11.6. For each D
! as
!
\ [
b
.D; !/ D
.t;
t !; D.
t !// :
s0
ts
tn !C1
Our first aim is to prove the following result on the existence of global pullback
D-attractor.
Theorem 11.4. Suppose the
-cocycle is continuous and pullback Db 2 D which is pullback D-absorbing.
asymptotically compact, and there exists B
b
Then, the parameterized set A defined by
b !/
A.!/ D .B;
for
! 2 ;
b 2 S is a
is a global pullback D-attractor which is minimal in the sense that if C
parameterized set such that C.!/ is closed and
lim distX ..t;
t !; B.
t !//; C.!// D 0;
t!C1
for all
b2 D
D
and
! 2 :
b 2 D, then
If in addition B
b !/ .B;
b !/ B.!/
.D;
b2 D
for all D
and
! 2 :
263
b 2 D, ! 2 ; and y 2 .D;
b !/. There exist a sequence tn !
Proof. Let us fix D
C1 and a sequence xn 2 D.
tn !/ such that
.tn ;
tn !; xn / ! y:
(11.20)
(11.21)
In particular, as xnk 2 D.
tnk !/ D D.
.tnk k/ .
k !//; we obtain from (11.21)
yk D .tnk k;
tnk !; xnk / 2 B.
k !/:
But then
.tnk ;
tnk !; xnk / D ..tnk k/ C k;
tnk !; xnk /
D .k;
k !; .tnk k;
tnk !; xnk //
D .k;
k !; yk /;
and consequently, by (11.20),
.k;
k !; yk / ! y with
yk 2 B.
k !/:
b !/.
Thus, y belongs to .B;
b !/, then there exist a sequence n !
Finally, observe that if z belongs to .B;
b is
C1 and a sequence wn 2 B.
n !/ such that .n ;
n !; wn / ! z: But, as B
b
pullback D-absorbing, there exists t0 .B; !/ 0 such that .n ;
n !; wn / 2 B.!/
b !/; and consequently z belongs to B.!/:
t
u
for all n t0 .B;
Remark 11.3. As a straightforward consequence of Proposition 11.1, we have that
b 2 D is pullback D-absorbing, then
if B
[
b !/ D .B;
b !/;
.D;
b
D2D
so that, under the assumptions in Theorem 11.4, we have
b !/ D
A.!/ D .B;
[
b
D2D
b !/
.D;
for ! 2 :
264
b 2 D and
Proposition 11.2. If is pullback D-asymptotically compact, then for D
b !/ is nonempty, compact, and
! 2 ; the set .D;
b !// D 0:
lim distX ..t;
t !; D.
t !//; .D;
t!C1
(11.22)
1
:
n
(11.23)
b !/:
y 2 .D;
(11.24)
265
But
.t; !; .tn ;
tn !; xn // D .t C tn ;
.tCtn / .
t !/; xn /;
and consequently, as is continuous,
.t C tn ;
.tCtn / .
t !/; xn / ! .t; !; y/:
Since we have t C tn ! C1 and xn 2 D.
tn !/ D D.
.tCtn / .
t !//; it follows that
b
t !/:
.t; !; y/ 2 .D;
b
t !/ .t; !; .D;
b !//: For y 2 .D;
b
t !/ there exist a
Now, we prove .D;
sequence tn ! C1 and a sequence xn 2 D.
tn .
t !// such that
.tn ;
tn .
t !/; xn / ! y:
(11.25)
If tn t; we have
.tn ;
tn .
t !/; xn / D .t C .tn t/;
.tn t/ !; xn /
D .t; !; .tn t;
.tn t/ !; xn //:
(11.26)
t!C1
for any
b 2 D:
D
[
b
D2D
b
t !/ D
.D;
[
b
D2D
b !// D .t; !;
.t; !; .D;
[
b
D2D
b !//;
.D;
266
S
b !/ is compact,
.D;
b
D2D
b !// D .t; !;
.D;
b
D2D
b !//:
.D;
b
D2D
t!C1
for all
r t:
(11.27)
267
for all
0 .t; D/:
for t 2 R;
\ [
st
!
U.t; /D. / ;
s
!1
D 2 D;
268
.D; t/
for t 2 R:
D2D
The non-autonomous set A, termed the global pullback D-attractor for the
process U, is minimal in the sense that if C D fC.t/gt2R with C.t/ 2 P.X/ is a
non-autonomous set such that C.t/ is closed and
lim distX .U.t; /B. /; C.t// D 0;
!1
@u
@u
u
C
ui
D f .t/ rp in .; C1/;
@xi
< @t
iD1
div u D 0
uD0
:
u.; x/ D u0 .x/
in .; C1/;
on @ .; C1/;
for x 2 :
269
To set our problem in the abstract framework, we consider the following usual
abstract space
o
n
2
VQ D u 2 C01 ./ W div u D 0 :
We define H as the closure of VQ in .L2 .//2 with the norm jj ; and the inner product
.; / where for u; v 2 .L2 .//2 we set
.u; v/ D
2 Z
X
jD1
Moreover we define V as the closure of VQ in .H01 .//2 with the norm k k; and the
associated scalar product ..; //; where for u; v 2 .H01 .//2 we have
2 Z
X
@uj @vj
..u; v// D
dx:
@xi @xi
i;jD1
2 Z
X
i;jD1
ui
@vj
wj dx
@xi
for u; v; w 2 V:
Define B W V V ! V 0 by
hB.u; v/; wi D b.u; v; w/
for
u; v; w 2 V;
and denote
B.u/ D B.u; u/:
2
.RI V 0 /. For each 2 R we consider the problem
Assume now that u0 2 H, f 2 Lloc
< d
.u.t/; v/ C ..u.t/; v// C hB.u.t//; vi D hf .t/; vi for all
dt
:
u. / D u0 :
v2V
(11.29)
270
It follows from the results of Chap. 7, cf. Theorem 7.2 and Remark 7.3, that problem (11.29) has a unique solution, u.I ; u0 /, that moreover belongs to C.; TI H/
for all T .
Define
U.t; /u0 D u.tI ; u0 /
for
t
and
u0 2 H:
(11.30)
rt
for all
and
u0 2 H:
(11.31)
One can prove (cf. Chap. 7) that for all t; the mapping U.; t/ W H ! H defined
by (11.30) is continuous. Consequently, the family fU.t; /g t defined by (11.30)
is a process U in H.
Moreover, it can be proved that U is weakly continuous, and more exactly the
following result holds true. Its proof is identical to the proof of Lemma 8:1 in [164],
and so we omit it.
Proposition 11.4. Let fu0n g H be a sequence converging weakly in H to an
element u0 2 H: Then
U.t; /u0n ! U.t; /u0
U.; /u0n ! U.; /u0
weakly in
weakly in
for all
L2 .; TI V/
t;
for all
< T:
(11.32)
(11.33)
(11.34)
(11.35)
t!1
and denote by D the class of all non-autonomous sets D D fD.t/gt2R such that
D.t/ 2 P.H/ for t 2 R, for which there exists rD 2 R such that D.t/
B.0; rD .t//; where B.0; rD .t// denotes the closed ball in H centered at zero with
radius rD .t/:
Now, we can prove the following result.
2
Theorem 11.6. Suppose that f 2 Lloc
.RI V 0 / is such that
1
for all
t 2 R:
(11.36)
271
Then, there exists a unique global pullback D -attractor for the process U defined
by (11.30).
Proof. Let 2 R and u0 2 H be fixed, and denote
u.t/ D u.tI ; u0 / D U.t; /u0
for all
t :
Z
e kf ./k2V 0 d
for all t:
(11.37)
et
t
1
e kf ./k2V 0 d
(11.38)
2et
1
(11.39)
for all
D .k/:
(11.40)
272
weakly in H:
(11.41)
i.e.,
U.t; t k/wk D w0
for all k D 0; 1; 2; : : : :
(11.42)
(11.43)
(11.44)
n !1
n0 !1
and this, together with the weak convergence, will imply the strong convergence
in H of U.t; n0 /u0n0 to w0 .
In order to prove (11.44), we consider the Hilbert norm in V given by
u2 D kuk2
2
juj ;
2
273
(11.46)
tk
t
tk
As, by (11.40),
U.t k; n0 /u0n0 2 B .t k/
for all
n0 D .k/
and
k 0;
we have
lim sup ek jU.t k; n0 /u0n0 j2 ek R2 .t k/
n0 !1
for all
k 0:
(11.47)
On the other hand, as U.t k; n0 /u0n0 ! wk weakly in H, from Proposition 11.4
we have
weakly in L2 .t k; tI V/:
(11.48)
Z
D
tk
1=2
R t
Z
lim
inf
0
n !1
tk
ek R2 .t
(11.51)
Z
k/ C 2
t
tk
e.t/ hf ./; U.; t k/wk i U.; t k/wk /2 d:
274
(11.52)
t
e.t/ hf ./; U.; t k/wk i U.; t k/wk 2 d:
tk
2et
tk
1
e kf ./k2V 0 d ! 0;
t
u
275
At the same time, the theory of pullback (or cocycle) attractors has been
developed for both the non-autonomous and random dynamical systems (see
[80, 137, 152, 206, 232]), and has shown to be very useful in the understanding
of the dynamics of non-autonomous dynamical systems. In this case, the concept
of pullback (or cocycle or non-autonomous) attractor provides a time-dependent
family of compact sets which attracts families of sets in a certain universe (e.g.,
the bounded sets in the phase space) and satisfying an invariance property, what
seems to be a natural set of conditions to be satisfied for an appropriate extension
of the autonomous concept of attractor. Moreover, this cocycle formulation allows
to handle more general time-dependent terms in the modelsnot only the periodic,
quasi-periodic, or almost periodic ones (see, for instance, [38], and [43] for nonautonomous models containing hereditary characteristics). Note that, however, the
notion of pullback attractor has its limitations, namely it does not always capture
the asymptotic behavior of the non-autonomous system as time advances to C1,
see [140]. To counteract this limitation the synthesis of the approach by pullback
attractors with the one by uniform attractors has been presented in [19, 53, 136]
In order to prove the existence of the attractor (in both the autonomous and
non-autonomous cases) the simplest, and therefore the strongest, assumption is
the compactness of the solution operator associated with the system, which is
usually available for parabolic systems in bounded domains. However, this kind of
compactness does not hold in general for parabolic equations in unbounded domains
and second order in time equations on either bounded or unbounded domains.
Instead we often have some kind of asymptotic compactness. In this situation, there
are several approaches to prove the existence of the global (or non-autonomous)
attractor. Roughly speaking, the first one ensures the existence of the global (resp.
non-autonomous) attractor whenever a compact attracting set (resp. a family of
compact attracting sets) exists. The second method consists in decomposing the
solution operator (resp. the cocycle or two-parameter semigroup) into two parts: a
compact part and another one which decays to zero as time goes to infinity. However,
as it is not always easy to find such decomposition, one can use a third approach
which is based on the use of the energy equations which are in direct connection
with the concept of asymptotic compactness. This third method has been used in
[164] (and also [181]) to extend to the non-autonomous situation the corresponding
one in the autonomous framework (see [201] and also [11]), but related to uniform
asymptotic compactness. The method used in this chapter is a generalization of the
latter to the theory of pullback attractors.
More information on non-autonomous infinite dimensional dynamical systems
can be found in monographs [53, 136] and the review article [10], cf. also [208]. For
the random case, see, e.g., [30, 31, 39, 95, 135, 153]. Two-dimensional problems
with delay have been studied in [37, 170].
12
for all
r t:
277
278
0 .t; D/:
Definition 12.3. A non-autonomous set A D fA.t/gt2R with A.t/ 2 P.X/ for all
t 2 R is said to be a pullback D-attractor for the process U.; / if
(i) A.t/ is compact for all t 2 R,
(ii) A is pullback D-attracting, i.e.,
lim distX .U.t; /D. /; A.t// D 0 for all
!1
D2D
and all
t 2 R;
(iii) A is invariant, i.e., U.t; /A. / D A.t/ for 1 < t < C1.
We consider the initial and boundary value problem for the NavierStokes equations
studied already in Chap. 11. Namely, let R2 be an open, bounded or
unbounded, domain with smooth boundary @ such that there exists a constant
1 > 0 for which
Z
Z
2
dx
jrj2 dx for all 2 H01 ./:
1
@u
@u
u
C
ui
D f .t/ rp in .; C1/;
@xi
< @t
iD1
div u D 0
uD0
:
u.; x/ D u0 .x/;
in .; C1/;
on @ .; C1/;
for x 2 :
2 Z
X
jD1
uj .x/vj .x/ dx
for
u; v 2 .L2 .//2 :
279
The space V is defined as the closure of VQ in .H01 .//2 with the norm kk ; and the
associated scalar product ..; //; given by
.ru; rv/ D ..u; v// D
2 Z
X
@uj @vj
dx
@xi @xi
i;jD1
u; v 2 .H01 .//2 :
for
2 Z
X
ui
i;jD1
@vj
wj dx
@xi
for u; v; w 2 V:
< d
.u.t/; v/ C ..u.t/; v// C hB.u.t//; vi D hf .t/; vi for all
dt
:
u. / D u0 :
v2V
(12.1)
It follows from the results of Chap. 7, cf. Theorem 7.2 and Remark 7.3, that problem
(12.1) has a unique solution, u.I ; u0 /, that moreover belongs to C.; TI H/ for
all T .
Now we formulate a result about the existence of the pullback attractor for the
above NavierStokes problem. We define the evolutionary process associated to
(12.1) as follows. Let us consider the unique solution u.I ; u0 / to (12.1). We set
U.t; /u0 D u.tI ; u0 /
for t
and
u0 2 H:
(12.2)
for all
rt
and
u0 2 H:
t!1
280
and denote by D the class of all non-autonomous sets D D fD.t/gt2R with D.t/ 2
P.H/ for all t 2 R such that D.t/ B.0; rD .t//; for some rD 2 R ; where
B.0; rD .t// denotes the closed ball in H centered at zero with radius rD .t/. Then we
have (see Chap. 11).
2
Theorem 12.1. Suppose that f 2 Lloc
.RI V 0 / is such that
1
for all
t 2 R:
(12.3)
1 t
e
Z
e kf ./k2V 0 d
for t:
If u. / 2 D. / B.0; rD . //, rD 2 R , then the first term on the right-hand side
converges to zero as ! 1, and
2
ju.t/j et
2
1
for all
0 .t; D/:
(12.4)
Thus U.t; /D. / B.t/, where B.t/ is the ball B.0; R.t// in H. By (12.3), the nonautonomous set B D fB.t/gt2R belongs to D and is D -absorbing for the process
U.t; /. The uniqueness follows immediately from the fact that A 2 D and from
the attracting property.
Let us assume that the forcing f is time-independent, with f 2 V 0 . Then, from
Theorem 12.1 there follows the existence of the global attractor A H for the
semigroup fS.t/gt0 given by S.t/ D U. C t; /, associated with the related
autonomous NavierStokes problem (cf. Chap. 7).
Theorem 12.2. There exists a unique global attractor for the semigroup fS.t/gt0
in H associated with the autonomous NavierStokes problem, i.e., problem (12.1)
with f 2 V 0 .
Actually, the family B.H/ of all bounded sets in H constitutes, for this case, the
attraction universe of non-autonomous (and, in this case, constant in time) sets
D from Definition 12.2. From (12.4) we conclude that the ball B.0; R/ in H with
R D 2=. /kf kV 0 absorbs all bounded sets in H, i.e., S.t/B B.0; R/ for any
bounded set B 2 B.H/ and all t t0 .B/. The semigroup fS.t/gt0 is B.H/asymptotically compact, that is, for any sequence tn ! 1 and any sequence xn
bounded in H the set fS.tn /xn gn2N is relatively compact in H. Moreover, A D
!.B.0; R//the !-limit set of the ball B.0; R/.
281
1
(12.5)
for all t 2 R.
2
Lemma 12.1. Let be an open bounded set in R2 of class C2 , f 2 Lloc
.RI H/
satisfy (12.5), and let fU.t; /g t be the evolutionary process associated with
problem (12.1). Then, for every t 2 R there exists a compact set B.t/ absorbing
for fU.t; /g t .
Proof. The proof is based on the uniform Gronwall lemma (see Chap. 3) applied to
the second energy inequality (see Chap. 7 and also Chap. III, Sect. 2 in [220])
d
2
c
kuk2 C kuk2 jf j2 C 3 juj2 kuk4 :
dt
As usual, we use the first energy inequality (see Chap. 7)
d 2
1
juj C kuk2 jf j2
dt
(12.6)
et
t
1
(12.7)
together with (12.5) to obtain a bound on the norm ku.t/k. However, the bound on
the forcing (12.5) is not uniform in t 2 R, and this implies that our estimates are
local in time. More precisely, we shall prove that for any u. / 2 D. / for D. /
in any non-autonomous set D D fD.t/gt2R 2 D, any fixed t 2 R, and T, r, with
0 < r < T, there exists M.t; T; r/ such that
kU.; /u. /k M.t; T; r/
for all
2 t T C r; t and
0 .t; T; D/:
(12.8)
282
First, from (12.7) and (12.5) it follows that for all 2 .t T; t/,
Z
eT t
e jf ./j2 d M1 .t; T/ for all 0 .t; T; D/:
jU.; /u. /j2 2
1
(12.9)
2
Since f 2 Lloc
.RI H/, we have for all s 2 .t T; t r/ and some M2 .t; T; r/ < 1,
1
sCr
(12.10)
Now, from (12.6) together with (12.9) and (12.10) we have for all s 2 .t T; t r/
and some M3 .t; T; r/ < 1,
Z
sCr
(12.11)
In the end, from (12.9) and (12.11) we obtain for all s 2 .t T; t r/ and some
M4 .t; T; r/ < 1,
c
3
sCr
The last three estimates and the uniform Gronwall lemma give (12.8).
t
u
Z
Z
'.U.t; s/u0 /ds D
'.u/d t .u/
A.t/
(12.12)
283
(12.13)
We have thus,
jU.t; r/u0 U.t; s/u0 j2 D jU.t; s/U.s; r/u0 U.t; s/u0 j2
Z t
2
2
jU.s; r/u0 u0 j exp C
kU.; s/u0 k d :
s
From the continuity of the function r ! U.; r/u0 with values in H it follows
that if jr sj < is small enough then the right-hand side of the above inequality
is as small as needed. Since ' 2 C.H/ we conclude that the function in (12.13) is
continuous.
As to its boundedness we know that there exists a compact absorbing set B1 .t/
for fU.t; /g, in particular, there exists 0 such that for s 0 , U.t; s/u0 2 B1 .t/.
Hence, the function s ! '.U.t; s/u0 / is bounded on .1; 0 . It is also bounded
on the compact interval 0 ; t.
t
u
We continue the proof of the theorem. Since the function in (12.13) is continuous
and bounded, the left-hand side of (12.12) is well defined.
We have
Z t
Z 0
1
1
LIM !1
'.U.t; s/u0 /ds D LIM !1
'.U.t; s/u0 /ds:
t
t
From this equality it follows that the left-hand side of (12.12) depends only on the
values of ' on the compact set B1 .t/. By the Tietze extension theorem, the lefthand side of (12.12) defines a linear positive functional on C.B1 .t// and from the
KakutaniRiesz representation theorem it follows that there exists a measure 1t on
B1 .t/ defined on some -algebra M in B1 .t/ which contains all Borel sets in B1 .t/
and such that
Z
Z t
1
'.U.t; s/u0 /ds D
'.u/d 1t .u/:
LIM !1
t
B1 .t/
We can extend this measure easily to all Borel sets in H without enlarging its
support.
284
We shall show that the support of the measure 1t is contained in A.t/. Let Bn .t/,
n D 1; 2; : : :, be a sequence of compact absorbing sets such that Bn .t/
BnC1 .t/ and
\1
nD1 Bn .t/ D A.t/. From the above construction, for every n there exists a measure
nt of support contained in Bn .t/ and such that
1
LIM !1
t
Z
Z
'.U.t; s/u0 /ds D
Bn .t/
'.u/d nt .u/
holds. As the left-hand side of this equation is independent of n, it follows that for
' 2 C.H/,
Z
B1 .t/
'.u/d 1t .u/ D
Z
Bn .t/
'.u/d nt .u/:
(12.14)
By the Tietze extension theorem, every 2 C.Bn .t// is of the form 'jBn .t/ for some
' 2 C.B1 .t//. For any
2 C0 .B1 .t/ n Bn .t// both ' and ' C are continuous
extensions of . It then follows that
Z
.u/d 1t .u/ D 0:
B1 .t/nBn .t/
B1 .t/nBn .t/
whence 1t .K/ D 0 for every compact set K in B1 .t/ n Bn .t/. From the regularity of
1t it follows that 1t .B1 .t/ n Bn .t// D 0. Therefore, the support of 1t is contained
in Bn .t/. From (12.14) and the Tietze extension theorem we conclude that
Z
Bn .t/
'.u/d 1t .u/
Z
D
Bn .t/
'.u/d nt .u/
for all continuous functions ' on Bn .t/. By the regularity of measures 1t and nt , the
above equation holds for all 1t - and nt -integrable functions. Thus 1t D nt on Bn .t/
and on the whole phase space H. In the end, the support of 1t is contained in every
set Bn .t/ with n 1 which implies that it is contained in \1
nD1 Bn .t/ D A.t/. The
resulting measure with support in A.t/ is denoted by t . Setting ' D 1 in (12.12) we
obtain t .A.t// D 1, and so t is a probability measure. The proof of the theorem
is complete.
t
u
285
for all
t; 2 R such that
t
(12.15)
1
'.u/d t .u/ D LIMM!1
tM
H
D LIMM!1
1
tM
M
Z
CLIMM!1
D LIMM!1
Z
D
1
M
Z t
1
'.U.t; s/u0 /ds
tM
Z
'.U.t; /U.; s/u0 /ds
M
whence
Z
Z
'.u/d t .u/ D
H
286
k
X
(12.16)
jD1
Z
.u/d t .u/
A.t/
A. /
.u/d .u/
Z tZ
(12.17)
A.s/
u.t/jtDs D u0
where
s 2 R:
Since u 2 L2 .; tI D.A// for s < < t, it is not difficult to check that the function
t ! .f .t/ Au.t/ B.u.t//; 0 .u.t/// is integrable on .; t/. From the Navier
Stokes equation it follows that ut 2 L1 .; t; H/. Thus for 2 T we have
d
.u.t// D .ut .t/; 0 .u.t///
dt
D .f .t/ Au B.u/; 0 .u.t/// D .F.u.t/; t/; 0 .u.t///
almost everywhere in the considered interval. Integrating in t we obtain
Z
.u.t// .u. // D
For an arbitrary s < , let u0 2 H and u./ D U.; s/u0 for s. Then, for the
above solution we have
Z t
.F.U.; s/u0 ; /; 0 .U.; s/u0 //d:
.U.t; s/u0 / .U.; s/u0 / D
287
1
M
.: : :/ds
1
M
1
D LIMM!1
M
t
1
M
(12.18)
Now, in view of (12.15), (cf. also Chap. II in [228]) the left-hand side equals
LIMM!1
Z
D
1
M
Z
.U.; /U.; s/u0 /ds
.u/d t .u/
.u/d .u/:
1
M
Z
Z t Z
1
D LIMM!1
.F.U.; s/u0 ; /; 0 .U.; s/u0 //ds d
M
M
Z t
Z
1
0
LIMM!1
D
.F.U.; s/u0 ; /; .U.; s/u0 //ds d:
M M
For 2 .; t/ we have
LIMM!1
1
M
Z
1
D LIMM!1
.F.U.; /U.; s/u0 ; /; 0 .U.; /U.; s/u0 //ds
M M
Z
D .F.U.; /u; /; 0 .U.; /u//d .u/
Z
D
H
288
whence
Z Z t
1
.F.U.; s/u0 ; /; 0 .U.; s/u0 //dds
LIMM!1
M M
Z tZ
D
.F.u; /; 0 .u//d .u/ d:
juj2 d t .u/ C 2
A.t/
D2
Z tZ
Z tZ
kuk2 d s ds
A.s/
Z
A. /
for all t; 2 R, t .
Proof. The functionals u ! .u/ D juj2 and u ! kuk2 are bounded (even
continuous in the topology of H) on every A.t/, t 2 R. Moreover, 0 .u/ D 2u.
From (12.17) with this and F.u; s/ D f .s/ Au B.u/ we obtain (12.19) by an
approximation argument. Let the functionals m 2 T , m D 1; 2; 3; : : :, be such that
m .u/ D jPm uj2 on some ball B.0; R/ in H containing all A./ for t. Here,
Pm is the usual Galerkin projection operator in H onto the space spanned by the
first m eigenmodes of the Stokes operator. The identity (12.19) thus holds for Pm u
in the place of u. Letting m ! 1 and using the Lebesgue dominated convergence
theorem we obtain (12.19).
t
u
289
does not depend on time. The support of this stationary solution is contained in the
corresponding global attractor (Theorem 12.7, cf. Chap. 8 and also Chap. 4 in [99]).
Theorem 12.6. Let fU.t; /gt be the evolutionary process associated with the
NavierStokes system (12.1) and let u0 be an arbitrary element of the phase space
H. Denote by Q 0 the time-average initial measure given by the relation
LIM !1
1
0
'.u/d Q 0 .u/
H
for all functionals ' 2 C.H/. Then the support of Q 0 is contained in the pullback
attractors section A.0/ and the kinetic energy of Q 0 is finite
Z
Z
.u/d t .u/ D
A.t/
.u/d Q 0 .u/ C
A.0/
Z tZ
0
holds for all t 0, F.u; s/ D f .s/ Au B.u/, and the family of moments
2T,
(S2) the energy equation
Z
juj d t .u/ C 2
A.t/
Z tZ
0
kuk2 d s .u/ds
A.s/
juj d Q 0 .u/ C 2
A.0/
Z tZ
0
.u/d t .u/
A.t/
290
juj2 d t .u/
A.t/
kuk2 d t .u/
A.t/
1
.RC /.
is in Lloc
If the system (12.1) is autonomous, that is, the forcing f does not depend on time
then Theorem 12.6 reduces to the following one.
Theorem 12.7. Let fS.t/gt0 be the semigroup associated with the autonomous
NavierStokes system
du
C Au C B.u/ D f 2 H
dt
with
u.t/jtD0 D u0 ;
and let u0 be an arbitrary element of the phase space H. Then the time-average
measure given by the relation
1
LIM !1
0
0
Z
1
'.S.0 s/u0 /ds D LIM !C1
'.S.s/u0 /ds
0
Z
D
'.u/d .u/
H
for all functionals ' 2 C.H/ has support contained in the global attractor A .
Moreover, it is a stationary statistical solution of the considered NavierStokes
system, namely, the following conditions hold:
(ST1)
Z
(ST2)
Z
A
291
(ST3)
Z
E1 juj2 <E2
2
kuk .f ; u/ d 0
(12.20)
1
t
t
Z
'.U.t; s/u.s// ds D
'.v/ d t .v/
(12.21)
A.t/
A. /
Remark 12.1. Theorem 12.8 holds for any pullback attractor A D fA.t/gt2R .
Assume that there exists a minimal pullback attractor Am D fAm .t/gt2R for the
292
process U.; /. Then the support of measure t from Theorem 12.8 is contained in
Am .t/ and in formulas (12.21), (12.22) one can replace A.t/ by Am .t/.
In the proof of the theorem we will use the following lemma, cf. [197]:
Lemma 12.4. Let .X; / be a metric space, f W X ! R a continuous mapping, and
let K X be compact. Then for every > 0 there exists a D f ./ > 0 such that
if u 2 X, v 2 K, and .u; v/ then jf .u/ f .v/j .
Proof (of Theorem 12.8). Fix u./ 2 D and ' 2 C.X/. In view of the existence
of the pullback attractor,R the -continuity of the process U.t; / and Lemma 12.4,
t
1
the function 7! t
'.U.t; s/u.s// ds is bounded on the interval .1; t. It
is continuous by an application of the dominated convergence theorem and the
Lebesgue differential theorem.
It suffices to prove that the function s 7! '.U.t; s/u.s// is bounded on .1; t:
it is continuous, since U.; / is -continuous and u./ is continuous, and so it is
bounded on every compact interval t0 ; t. We now show that it is bounded on .1; t0
for t0 sufficiently large and negative.
If this is not the case then there is a sequence fsn g with sn ! 1 such that
j'.U.t; sn /u.sn //j ! 1:
(12.23)
However, from the existence of the pullback D-attractor it follows that the process
U.; / is pullback D-asymptotically compact, so there exists a subsequence of fsn g
(which we relabel) such that U.t; sk /u.sk / ! ! for some ! 2 X (since u./ 2 D).
From the continuity of ', we have '.U.t; sk /u.sk // ! '.!/, contradicting (12.23).
We now define
Z t
1
'.U.t; s/u.s// ds;
(12.24)
L.'/ D LIM !1
t
and claim that L.'/ depends only on the values of ' on A.t/. Indeed, take functions
'; 2 C.X/ with ' D on A.t/, and given > 0 use Lemma 12.4 to find a such
that
.u; v/
.v/j
for every
for all
s 0 :
v 2 A.t/:
(12.25)
293
and so
j'.U.t; s/u.s//
.U.t; s/u.s//j
.vs /j
.U.t; s/u.s//j ;
.vs /. Thus
Z t
1
/j D LIM !1
.'.U.t; s/u.s// .U.t; s/u.s/// ds
t
Z 0 Z t
D LIM !1
.'.U.t; s/u.s// .U.t; s/u.s/// ds
C
t
0
lim sup
!1
.0 /
t
C lim sup
!1
.t 0 /
sup fj'.U.t; s/u.s//j C j .U.t; s/u.s//jg :
t s20 ;t
Since > 0 was arbitrary we conclude that L.'/ depends only on the values of '
on A.t/.
Define G.'/ D L.l.'// for ' 2 C.A.t//, where l.'/ is an extension of ' given
by the Tietze theorem. As G is a linear and positive functional on C.A.t//, we have,
by the KakutaniRiesz representation theorem,
Z
'.v/ d t .v/:
G.'/ D
A.t/
Z
'.v/ d t .v/ D
'.v/ d t .v/;
A.t/
D LIMM!1
1
tM
1
tM
M
Z
'.U.t; s/u.s// ds
'.U.t; s/u.s// ds
C LIMM!1
1
tM
t
'.U.t; s/u.s// ds
294
1
D LIMM!1
M
D LIMM!1
Z
D
1
M
M
Z
t
u
Now, we can come back to the NavierStokes equations. We define the evolutionary process associated to (12.1) and the attraction universe D exactly as in
Sect. 12.1. We have already proved the existence of a unique pullback D -attractor
A D fA.t/gt2R belonging to D for the process U.t; / in H (cf. Theorem 12.1). By
Lemma 12.2 the process U.t; / is -continuous. Thus, the existence of a family of
invariant measures t for U.t; / follows from Theorem 12.8. Namely, we have the
following result:
Theorem 12.9. Let R2 be an open, bounded or unbounded, set such that there
exists a constant 1 > 0 for which
Z
1
dx
jrj2 dx
2
Suppose that f 2 Lloc
.RI V 0 / is such that
1
for all
t 2 R:
Let fU.t; /gt be the evolutionary process associated with the NavierStokes
system (12.1). Fix a generalized Banach limit LIMT!1 and let u W R ! X be a
continuous map such that u./ 2 D . Then there exists a unique family of Borel
probability measures f t gt2R in the phase space H such that the support of measure
t is contained in A.t/ and
1
LIM !1
t
Z
'.U.t; s/u.s//ds D
'.u/d t .u/
A.t/
A. /
295
13
In this chapter we consider the problem of existence and finite dimensionality of the
pullback attractor for a class of two-dimensional turbulent boundary driven flows
which naturally appear in lubrication theory. We generalize here the results from
Chap. 9 to the non-autonomous problem.
The new element in our study with respect to that in Chap. 9 is the allowance of
the speed of rotation of the cylinder to depend on time. Our aim is first to prove the
existence of the unique global in time solution of the problem, and then to study its
time asymptotics in the frame of the dynamical systems theory. We use the theory of
pullback attractors that allows us to pose quite general assumptions on the velocity
of the boundary. Neither quasi-periodicity nor even boundedness is demanded to
prove the existence and to estimate the fractal dimension of the corresponding
pullback attractor. We shall apply the results from Chap. 11, reformulated here in
the language of evolutionary processes.
13.1 Preliminaries
In this section we recall a theorem about the existence of pullback attractors for
evolutionary processes.
Let us consider an evolutionary process U on a metric space X, i.e., a family
fU.t; /g1< t<C1 of continuous mappings U.t; / W X ! X, such that for x 2 X
and 2 R U.; /x D x; and
U.t; / D U.t; r/U.r; /
for all
r t:
297
298
and therefore
A1 .t/ A2 .t/ D A2 .t/:
Analogously, one obtains A2 .t/ A1 .t/.
Remark 13.2. It is said that the attraction universe D is inclusion-closed if, given
the non-autonomous set D 2 D, for any D0 D fD0 .t/gt2R with D0 .t/ 2 P.X/ for
t 2 R, such that D0 .t/ D.t/ for all t, one also has D0 2 D:
Taking into account that .B; t/ B.t/; and Remark 13.1, we can assert that
if the universe D is inclusion-closed and the sets B.t/ are closed, then the pullback
D-attractor A constructed in Theorem 13.1 belongs to the universe D, and is the
unique pullback D-attractor for U.; / belonging to this universe.
The rest of this chapter is organized as follows. In Sect. 13.2 we give a precise
formulation of the considered problem and write it in a weak form, suitable for
our further considerations. In Sect. 13.3 we derive the first energy inequality and
establish the existence of unique global in time solution of the problem. In Sect. 13.4
we prove the existence of a pullback attractor for the corresponding evolutionary
process by using the energy equation method. In Sect. 13.5 we obtain an upper
bound of the pullback attractor dimension in terms of the data.
(13.1)
div u D 0;
(13.2)
299
in the channel
1 D fx D .x1 ; x2 / W 1 < x1 < 1; 0 < x2 < h.x1 /g;
where h is a positive, smooth, and L-periodic function in x1 .
Let
D fx D .x1 ; x2 / W 0 < x1 < L; 0 < x2 < h.x1 /g;
and @ D C [ L [ D , where C and D are the bottom and the top, and L is
the lateral part of the boundary of .
We are interested in solutions of (13.1) and (13.2) in which are L-periodic
with respect to x1 , or, to be more precise, analogously to Chap. 10, both the velocity
u and the Cauchy stress vector Tn on L are L-periodic with respect to x1 . Moreover,
we assume
uD0
on
D ;
(13.3)
on
C ;
(13.4)
where U0 .t/ is a locally Lipschitz continuous function of time t. Finally, the initial
condition at some time 2 R is given as
u.x; / D u0 .x/
for
x 2 :
(13.5)
U.h.x1 /; t/ D 0 for
x1 2 .0; L/
and
t 2 R:
(13.6)
300
(13.7)
.; 1/;
(13.8)
(13.9)
on
v D 0 on
.; 1/;
where G D U;x2 x2 e1 U;t e1 Uv;x1 .v/2 U;x2 e1 , and the initial condition
v.x; / D v0 .x/ D u0 .x/ U.x2 ; /e1
in :
(13.10)
u.x/ v.x/dx;
and
Z
..u; v// D .ru; rv/ D
ru.x/W rv.x/ dx
jvj D .v; v/ 2
and
Let
b.u; v; w/ D ..u r/v; w/;
and
a.u; v/ D .ru; rv/:
Then the natural weak formulation of the problem (13.7)(13.10) is as follows.
301
Problem 13.1. Find the velocity v such that for each T > ,
v 2 C.; TI H/ \ L2 .; TI V/;
and for all 2 V and a.e. t > ,
d
.v.t/; / C a.v.t/; / C b.v.t/; v.t/; / D F.v.t/; /;
dt
(13.11)
with
v.x; / D v0 .x/
on
where
F.v; / D a.; / b.; v; / b.v; ; / .;t ; /;
(13.12)
(13.13)
302
Consider the term F.v; v/ on the right-hand side of (13.13). By (13.12) we have
F.v; v/ D a.; v/ b.v; ; v/ .;t ; v/:
(13.14)
kvk2 :
8
(13.15)
We have
ja.; v/j kkkvk 2kk2 C
kvk2
4
for all
v 2 V:
(13.16)
supp 0; 1=2;
and
p
8:
2
=.4h0 jU0 .t/j/
if
if
(13.17)
(13.18)
h0 "
jU0 j;
2
303
and
2
Z L Z h.x1 /
Z L Z h.x1 /
v
v.x1 ; x2 / 2
@v.x1 ; x2 / 2
dx2 dx1 4
dx2 dx1
x 2
x
@x
2 L .Q" /
2
2
0
0
0
0
t
u
We estimate the last term on the right-hand side of (13.14) using the Poincar
inequality
1
jvj p kvk
1
for v 2 V;
(13.19)
p
p
where we can take 1= 1 D hM = 2 with hM D max0x1 L h.x1 /. We get
1
2
j.;t ; v/j j;t jjvj j;t j p kvk
j;t j2 C kvk2 :
1
8
1
(13.20)
2
j;t j2 C kvk2 ;
1
2
and by (13.13),
1d 2
2
jvj C kvk2 2kk2 C
j;t j2 :
2 dt
2
1
(13.21)
To estimate the right-hand side in terms of the data, we use the following lemma.
Lemma 13.2. Let U be as in (13.18). Then for almost all t,
Z
1
Lh0 U02 .t/".t/;
2
(13.22)
4LU02 .t/ 1
;
h0 ".t/
(13.23)
and
Z
p
j"0 .t/j 2 Lh0 ".t/
0
:
jU;t .x2 ; t/j dx1 dx2 jU0 .t/j C 2jU0 .t/j
".t/
2
(13.24)
304
Proof. We have jU.x2 ; t/j jU0 .t/j and supp U Q" , which gives (13.22).
Moreover,
Z
U2
jU;x2 .x2 ; t/j dx D 2 02
h0 "
Z
0 x2 2
dx
h"
U02
L
h20 "2
h0 "
2
2
0 x2 2
dx2 4LU0 1 ;
h0 "
h0 "
p
as j0 j 8, which gives (13.23). In order to obtain (13.24) we use (13.18) and the
definition of to get
x2
x2
1 x2 "0 .t/ 0
C jU0 .t/j 2
jU;t .x2 ; t/j
h0 ".t/
" .t/
h0
h0 ".t/
p
j"0 .t/j
jU00 .t/j C 2jU0 .t/j
".t/
jU00 .t/j
for 0 x2 h0 "=2 and almost all t, from which the assertion follows easily.
t
u
Applying now Lemma 13.2 to inequality (13.21) with " as in (13.17) we obtain
the first energy estimate,
1d
jv.t/j2 C kv.t/k2 f 2 .t/
2 dt
2
a.e. in t;
(13.25)
(13.26)
where
.t /
jv.t/j e
jv./j C 2
t
e.st/ f 2 .s/ds:
(13.27)
To prove the uniqueness of solutions and their continuous dependence on the initial
data we assume that v and vN are two solutions of Problem 13.1, write (13.11) for
their difference, w D v v,
N and set D w, to get
1d
jw.t/j2 C kw.t/k2 C b.w; v; w/ D b.w; ; w/:
2 dt
2
305
1
2
kwk2 C c2 ./jwj2 kvk2 :
8
for t
and
v0 2 H;
(13.29)
where v.tI ; v0 / is the solution of Problem 13.1. From the uniqueness of solution to
this problem, one immediately obtains that
U.t; /v0 D U.t; r/U.r; /v0 ;
for all
rt
and
v0 2 H:
306
From Theorem 13.2 it follows that for all t ; the mapping U.t; / W H !
H defined by (13.29) is continuous. Consequently, the family fU.t; /g t defined
by (13.29) is a process in H.
Moreover, it can be proved that U.; t/ is sequentially weakly continuous, more
exactly, we have the following result.
Proposition 13.1. Let fv0n g H be a sequence converging weakly in H to an
element v0 2 H: Then
U.t; /v0n ! U.t; /v0
U.; /v0n ! U.; /v0
for all t ;
weakly in H
weakly in L2 .; TI V/
for all
T > :
Proof. The proof is almost identical to that of Lemma 2:1 in [201] and we omit it.
t
u
Now, we define the universe of the non-autonomous sets. For D 1 , let
D D fD W R ! P.H/ W
t!1
(13.30)
Then, there exists a unique pullback D -attractor A 2 D for the process U.t; /
defined by (13.29).
Proof. Let D 2 D be given. From the first energy estimate (13.27) and
from (13.31) we obtain
2
.t /
jU.t; /v0 j e
t
jD. /j C 2e
t
1
1
(13.32)
307
and consider the non-autonomous set B D fB .t/gt2R where B .t/ are closed balls
in H defined by
B .t/ D fw 2 H W jwj R .t/g:
In view of (13.30) it is immediate to see that B 2 D . Moreover, by (13.30)
and (13.32), the family B is pullback D -absorbing for the process U.t; /.
Clearly, the attraction universe D is inclusion-closed and the sets B .t/ are
closed, and thus, according to Theorem 13.1 and Remark 13.2, to complete the
proof of the theorem we have to prove that U.t; / is pullback D -asymptotically
compact.
Let D D fD.t/gt2R 2 D , a sequence n ! 1, a sequence v0n 2 D.n /, and
t 2 R be fixed. We must prove that we can extract a subsequence that converges in
H from the sequence fU.t; n /v0n g.
As the non-autonomous set B D fB .t/gt2R is pullback D -absorbing, for each
integer k 0 there exists a D .k/ t k such that
U.t k; /D. / B .t k/
for all
D .k/:
(13.33)
weakly in
H:
i.e.,
U.t; t k/wk D w0
for all
k D 0; 1; 2; : : : :
(13.34)
(13.35)
308
n0 !1
and this, together with the weak convergence, will imply the strong convergence in
H of U.t; n0 /v0n0 to w0 .
Our aim is to prove (13.35). We shall use the notation,
hg.t/; wi D a..t/; w/ .;t ; w/
for w 2 V;
and
Q.t; w/ D kwk2
2
jwj C b.w; .t/; w/
2
for
.t; w/ 2 R V:
(13.37)
tk
t
tk
As, by (13.33),
U.t k; n0 /v0n0 2 B .t k/
n0 D .k/
and
k D 0; 1; 2; : : : ;
lim sup ek U.t k; n0 /v0n0 2 ek R2 .t k/
for
k D 0; 1; 2; : : : :
for all
we have
n0 !1
(13.38)
309
On the other hand, as U.t k; n0 /v0n0 ! wk weakly in H, from Proposition 13.1
we have
U.; t k/U.t k; n0 /v0n0 ! U.; t k/wk
(13.39)
weakly in L2 .t k; tI V/:
Taking into account that, in particular, e.t/ g./ 2 L2 .t k; tI V 0 /; we obtain
from (13.39),
Z
lim
0
n !1 tk
(13.40)
tk
tk
Z
lim
inf
0
n !1
(13.41)
tk
Z
C2
(13.42)
tk
310
3et
tk
1
es kg.s/k2V 0 ds ! 0;
t
u
sCr
and
s
jU00 ./j2 d M:
(13.44)
Then the attractor A D fA.t/gt2R from Theorem 13.3 has finite fractal dimension,
namely,
dfH .A.t// d
(13.45)
(13.46)
for all t 2 R. Assumepthat for any t 2 R there exist T D T.t/, l D l.t; T/ 2 1; C1/,
D .t; T/ 2 .0; 1= 2/, and N D N.t/ such that for any u; v 2 A. / and t T,
jU. C T; /u U. C T; /vj lju vj;
(13.47)
(13.48)
311
(13.49)
Proof (of Theorem 13.4). First we show that for some M0 > 0 and all t t? ,
kA.t/k D supfkyk W y 2 A.t/g M0 :
(13.50)
(13.51)
where
F.v; Av/ D .; Av/ b.; v; Av/ b.v; ; Av/ .;t ; Av/:
To estimate the nonlinear term on the left-hand side of (13.51) we use the Agmon
inequality
kvkL1 ./ cjvj1=2 jAvj1=2 ;
that holds for v 2 D.A/. This estimate follows from the usual Agmon inequality
1=2
1=2
c0
jAvj2 C 3 jvj2 kvk4 :
8
Moreover,
j.;t ; Av/j
2
jAvj2 C j;t j2 ;
8
and
jb.; v; Av/j kkL1 ./ kvkjAvj
2
jAvj2 C kk2L1 ./ kvk2 :
8
312
Similarly,
2
jAvj2 C krk2L1 ./ jvj2 :
8
jAvj2 C 2jj2 :
8
(13.52)
where
c0
2
jv.t/j2 kv.t/k2 C k.t/k2L1 ./ ;
3
a.t/ D
(13.53)
and
b.t/ D
2
2
j;t .t/j2 C kr.t/k2L1 ./ jv.t/j2 C 2.t/2 :
(13.54)
t
1
e.st/ f 2 .s/ds:
(13.55)
Let us fix some T > r and an arbitrary t t . Let v0 2 A. / for near 1. Then,
from (13.55) and (13.30) we deduce that for all 2 .t T; t/,
jv./j2 3eT
t
1
e.st/ f 2 .s/ds
1
D 3e C1 .; /
C et
T
(13.56)
Z
t
1
s
e jU0 .s/j C
:
sCr
b./d
Z
p Z sCr 0
2Lh0
8 sCr
.3 C 2 2/
jU0 ./2 d C 3
jU0 ./j4 /jv./j2 d
s
s
L.4h0 /3
C
2
!2 Z
sCr
jU0 ./j5 d
if U0 ./
;
8h0
313
and
Z
sCr
sCr
b./d Lh0
L 3
C 3 2
8 h0
jU00 ./j2 d C
!2
3
8 h40
00
sup ./
sCr
jv./j2 d
if U0 ./
2R
:
8h0
Thus, by (13.44) and (13.56) we conclude that there exists M2 .r/ such that
Z
sCr
b./d M2 .r/
sCr
kv./k2 d M3 .r/
(13.57)
sCr
a./d M1 .r/
(13.58)
kv.t/k
M3 .r/
Q
C 2M2 .r/ exp 2M1 .r/ M.r/;
r
for
t t? :
314
(13.59)
with l.T/ D expf. 4 C 4 c2 ./M02 /Tg (we may always assume that the constant
l.T/ in (13.59) is greater or equal than one).
Now, we shall prove that inequality (13.48) holds true. Multiplying
d!
C A! C B.!; v/
N C B.v; !/ D B.w; /
dt
P
by Qm ! defined by Qm !.x; t/ D 1
Q
j .x/ (Qm D I Pm , Pm being the
jDmC1 !.t/w
projection on the space spanned by the first m eigenfuntions of the Stokes operator
with the periodic boundary conditions on L and Dirichlet boundary conditions on
C [ D ), we obtain
1d
N !; Qm !/
jQm !j2 C kQm !k2 C b.!; v; Qm !/ C b.v;
2 dt
D b.w; ; Qm !/:
(13.60)
Our first step is to obtain a differential inequality for jQm !j2 of the form (13.65)
below. To this end we have to estimate the nonlinear terms in (13.60).
We have,
b.!; v; Qm !/ D b.Pm !; v; Qm !/ C b.Qm !; v; Qm !/:
Now,
jb.Pm !; v; Qm !/j D jb.Pm !; Qm !; v/j
1
2c2 ./M02 12 2
m j!j C kQm !k2 :
p
8
1
(13.61)
jb.Qm !; v; Qm !/j
2c2 ./M02
jQm !j2 C kQm !k2 :
8
(13.62)
We have also
315
c2 ./ 2 jvj 2 kvk
N 2 jPm !j 2 kPm !k 2 kQm !k
2c2 ./M02 12 2
m j!j C kQm !k2 :
p
8
1
(13.63)
Using (13.44) we treat the term on the right-hand side of (13.60) as follows,
jb.!; ; Qm !/j D jb.!; Qm !; /j kkL1 ./ j!jkQm !k
2 2 2
M j!j C kQm !k2 :
b
8
(13.64)
(13.65)
where
4c2 ./M02
m D mC1
and
m D
4Mb2
8c2 ./M02 12
:
m C
p
1
m l.T/
1
<
m
2
316
for m large enough, as m is of the order of mC1 . This gives inequality (13.48) and
thus completes the proof of a finite dimensionality of the sets A.t/, for t t? , with
dfH .A.t// m C :
The same estimate holds also for t > t? in view of the property of the fractal
dimension under Lipschitz continuous mappings, cf. Theorem 9.1.
t
u
14
.x; t/ 2 RC ;
(14.1)
.x; t/ 2 RC :
(14.2)
317
318
We are interested in solutions of (14.1)(14.2) such that the velocity u and the
Cauchy stress vector Tn, where T is the stress tensor given by the constitutive law
Tij D pij C .ui;j C uj;i /, are L-periodic with respect to x1 on L . We assume that
uD0
on
D RC :
(14.3)
on
C RC ;
where
un D u n:
(14.4)
on
C RC ;
(14.5)
in :
(14.6)
The considered problem is motivated by the examination of a certain twodimensional flow in an infinite (rectified) journal bearing .1; C1/, where the
319
rot u rot v dx
(14.7)
for u; w 2 H 1 ./2 , z 2 V.
.rot u w/ z dx
(14.8)
320
f .x1 ; x2 / dx D
f .Nx/ dNx:
(14.9)
In particular, for u; v in V,
Z
Z
hAu; vi D
Z
D
(14.10)
To work with the boundary condition (14.5) we rewrite equation of motion (14.1) in
the Lamb form,
ut C rot rot u C rot u u C r pQ D 0 in RC :
(14.11)
Further, to transform the problem into the homogeneous one, for u 2 H 1 ./2 let
w 2 H 1 ./2 be such that div w D 0, w D 0 at D , w is L-periodic on L , and
w D u D s and wn D 0 on C , and let u D v C w. Then v 2 V as v D 0 at C .
Moreover, vn D un on C .
Multiplying (14.11) by z 2 V and using the Green formula we obtain
hv 0 .t/ C Av.t/ C Bv.t/; zi C
Z
C
(14.12)
where
Z
hF; zi D
(14.13)
and
hG.v/; zi D hB.v; w/ C B.w; v/; zi:
Above we have used the formula
Z
Z
Z
rot R a dx D
R rot a dx C
.R a/ n dS;
(14.14)
(14.15)
321
with R D rot v or R D rot w. Formula (14.15) is easy to get using the threedimensional vector calculus and (14.9). Observe that if a D 0 on @, then we
have
.R a/ n D .R an n/ n D 0:
We need the following assumptions on the potential j:
.j1/
j W R ! R is locally Lipschitz,
.j2/
@j satisfies the growth condition jj c1 C c2 juj for all u 2 R and all
2 @j.u/, with c1 > 0 and c2 > 0,
.j3/
@j satisfies the dissipativity
inf[email protected]/ u d1 d2 juj2 , for all
condition
u 2 R, where d1 2 R and d2 2 0; kk
2 .
3
with v 0 2 Lloc
.RC I V 0 /, v.0/ D v0 , and such that
hv 0 .t/ C Av.t/ C Bv.t/; zi C ..t/; zn /L2 .C / D hF; zi C hG.v.t//; zi; (14.16)
2
;
.t/ 2 [email protected]
n .;t//
for a.e.
x 2 C g;
2
.RC I V/
valid for a multifunction U W C ! 2R . Note that from the fact that v 2 Lloc
4
3
and v 0 2 Lloc
.RC I V 0 / it follows that v 2 C.RC I V 0 /, and hence the initial condition
makes sense. We define Cw .0; TI H/ as the space of all functions u W 0; T ! H
which are weakly continuous, i.e., such that for any 2 H the scalar product
1
.u.t/; / in H is a continuous function of t for t 2 0; T. Since v 2 Lloc
.RC I H/
C
then (see Lemma 3.18 or [227], Theorem II.1.7) v 2 Cw .R I H/, and thus the initial
condition makes sense in the phase space H.
2
One can see (cf. [176]) that if v 2 Lloc
.RC I V/ is a sufficiently smooth solution
of the partial differential inclusion (14.16) then there exists a distribution pQ such
that the conditions (14.11) and (14.5) hold for u D v C w. In conclusion, the
function u D v C w can be regarded as a weak solution of the initial boundary value
problem (14.1)(14.6), provided v is a solution of Problem 14.1 with v.0/ D u0 w,
u0 2 H.
322
The trajectory space K C of Problem 14.1 is defined as the set of those of its
solutions with some v0 2 H that satisfy the following inequality,
1d
jv.t/j2 C C1 kv.t/k2 C2 .1 C kFk2V 0 /;
2 dt
(14.17)
where C1 ; C2 > 0 and inequality (14.17) is understood in the sense that for all
0 t1 < t2 and for all 2 C01 ..t1 ; t2 //, 0 we have
1
2
t2
t1
jv.t/j
Z
.t/ dt C C1
t2
kv.t/k
.t/ dt C2 .1 C
t1
kFk2V 0 /
t2
t1
.t/ dt:
(14.18)
Note that since we cannot guarantee that for every solution of Problem 14.1
hv 0 .t/; v.t/i D 12 dtd jv.t/j2 holds, we cannot derive (14.17) for every solution of
Problem 14.1.
In the next section we prove that the trajectory space is not empty.
(2)
for v 2 V;
(14.19)
v 2 V:
(14.20)
Lemma 14.1. Given > 0 and s 2 R there exists a smooth function w 2 H 1 ./2
such that div w D 0 in , w D 0 on D , w is L-periodic in x1 , w D .s; 0/, wn D 0
on C , and for all v 2 V
jhB.v; w/; vij kvk2 :
(14.21)
323
h0 is the minimum value of h.x1 / on 0; L. It is clear that all the stated properties of
w other than (14.21) hold. To prove (14.21) observe that under our assumptions
Z
jrot wj2 dx D
jrwj2 dx;
(14.22)
and then
v
jhB.v; w/; vij jrvjkx2 w.x2 /kL1 .0;h0 /
x2
(14.23)
kvk 2kvk D kvk2
2
t
u
Lemma 14.2. Let j W R ! R satisfy .j1/.j3/. For any solution v of Problem 14.1,
3
for a.e.
t 2 RC ; (14.24)
Theorem 14.1. Let the potential j satisfy .j1/.j3/, F 2 V 0 . Then for every v0 2 H
there exists v 2 K C such that v.0/ D v0 .
R1
Proof. Let % 2 C01 ..1; 1// be a mollifier such that 1 %.s/ ds D 1 and %.s/ 0.
%k W R ! R by %k .s/ D k%.ks/ for k 2 N and s 2 R. Then supp %k
We1define
k ; 1k . We consider jk W R ! R defined by the convolution
Z
jk .r/ D
%k .s/j.r s/ ds
for
r 2 R:
324
jk .s C hs/ jk .s/
D lim
D lim
C
h
h!0
h!0C
Z
supp %k
%k .r/
j.s C hs r/ j.s r/
dr:
h
Estimating the integrand from below, by the Lebourg mean value theorem (cf.
Theorem 3.20) we get, for
2 .0; 1/ dependent on s; r; h, and 2 @j.s r C
hs/,
j.s C hs r/ j.s r/
D %k .r/.s r C
hs C r
hs/
h
%k .r/ d1 d2 js r C
hsj2 .c1 C c2 js r C
hsj/.jrj C hjsj/
%k .r/ d1 d2 .jsj C 1 C hjsj/2 .c1 C c2 .jsj C 1 C hjsj// .1 C hjsj/ ;
%k .r/
1
k
(14.25)
(14.26)
325
We take z D vk .t/ in (14.25) and, using (14.19) and (14.20) as well as the fact
that hB.v; w/; vi kvk2 for all v 2 V, where can be made arbitrarily small
(Lemma 14.1), we obtain
1d
jvk .t/j2 C kvk .t/k2 C .j0k ..vk /n .; t//; .vk /n .t//L2 .C / kFkV 0 kvk .t/k
2 dt
C kvk .t/k2
for a.e. t 2 RC . Using .j3/ and the Cauchy inequality with some " > 0 we obtain
1d
jvk .t/j2 C kvk .t/k2 C de1 m1 .C / de2 k.vk /n .t/k2L2 .C / C."/kFk2V 0
2 dt
C . C "/kvk .t/k2
for a.e. t 2 RC , where " > 0 is arbitrary and the constant C."/ is positive. Note that
by the trace theorem k.vk /n .t/k2L2 .C / kvk .t/k2L2 .C /2 k k2 kvk .t/k2 . It follows
that
1d
jvk .t/j2 C . de2 k k2 /kvk .t/k2 C."/kFk2V 0 C . C "/kvk .t/k2 C jde1 jL
2 dt
for a.e. t 2 RC . It is enough to take D " D
independent of t,
e
d2 kk2
.
4
1d
jvk .t/j2 C C1 kvk .t/k2 C2 .1 C kFk2V 0 /:
2 dt
Note that, after integration,
Z t
1
1
jvk .t/j2 C C1
kvk .s/k2 ds jv0k j2 C C2 .1 C kFk2V 0 /t
2
2
0
(14.27)
for all
t 0:
(14.28)
is bounded in
(14.29)
We denote by W V ! L2 .C / the linear and bounded map given as v D . v/n and
by W L2 .C / ! V 0 its adjoint operator. Now if Pk is the projection operator onto
the space Vk , (14.25) is equivalent to the following equation in V 0 ,
vk0 .t/ C Avk .t/ C Pk Bvk .t/ C Pk j0k ..vk /k .; t// D Pk F C Pk G.vk .t//:
326
From the choice of the space Vk it follows by Theorem 3.17 that kPk ukV 0 kukV 0
and by the argument of Lemma 14.2 it follows that for all T > 0
4
vk0
is bounded in L 3 .0; TI V 0 /:
(14.30)
2
weakly in Lloc
.RC I V/
(14.31)
and
vk0 ! v 0
3
weakly in Lloc
.RC I V 0 /:
(14.32)
First we show that v.0/ D v0 in H. To this end choose T > 0. We have, for t 2
.0; T/,
Z
vk .t/ D vk0 C
t
0
v.t/ D v.0/ C
t
0
v 0 .s/ ds;
D
0
Z
hvk0 v.0/; i dt C
Z
D Thvk0 v.0/; i C
Z
0
(14.33)
327
By assertion .B/ of Theorem 3.21, the functions j0k satisfy the growth condition .j2/
with the constants independent of k. It follows that the sequence j0k ..vk /n .; // is
bounded in L2 .0; TI L2 .C //, and we can extract a subsequence, not renumbered,
such that for all T > 0
j0k ..vk /n .; // !
(14.34)
2
We need to show that .t/ 2 [email protected]
for a.e. t 2 RC . We use assertion .C/ of
n .;t//
Theorem 3.21, whence we have, for all T > 0,
for a.e.
and the desired result follows. Hence we can pass to the limit in the multivalued
term.
Now we show the convergence in the nonlinear term, namely, that (for a
subsequence)
Z TZ
Z TZ
.rot vk .t/ vk .t// z.x/.t/ dx dt !
.rot v.t/ v.t// z.x/.t/ dx dt:
0
(14.35)
1
2
C
(14.36)
H)
(14.37)
hBvk .t/; zi D
(14.38)
Z
Z
D
The surface integral is equal to zero and hence, using (14.37) in the right-hand side,
we obtain
Z
Z
hBvk .t/; zi D .z r/vk .t/ vk .t/dx .vk .t/ r/z vk .t/ dx:
(14.39)
Integration by parts in the first integral on the right-hand side and then integration
in the time variable give the result.
328
Since we can deal with the second term on the right-hand side of (14.36) as in
the usual NavierStokes theory [219], we consider only the surface integral. Taking
the difference of the corresponding terms and setting zn .x/.t/ D .x; t/ we obtain
?Z
?
?
Z
C
?
?
..vk /n .x; t/ vn .x; t//..vk /n .x; t/ C vn .x; t// .x; t/ dS dt?
k.vk /n vn kL2 .0;TIL2 .C // kvk C vkL2 .0;TIL4 .C /2 / max k .t/kL4 .C / :
t20;T
This proves (14.35) since the embedding H 1=2 .C /2 Lr .C /2 is continuous for
r 1, vk is bounded in L2 .0; TI L4 .C /2 /, and k.vk /n vn kL2 .0;TIL2 .C // ! 0
by (14.33).
Hence, the limit v solves Problem 14.1. It remains to show (14.18). The proof
follows the lines of that of Theorem 8.1 in [61]. Let us fix 0 t1 < t2 and choose
2 C01 ..t1 ; t2 // with 0. We multiply (14.27) by and integrate by parts. We
have
Z t2
Z t2
Z
1 t2
jvk .t/j2 0 .t/ dt C C1
kvk .t/k2 .t/ dt C2 .1 C kFk2V 0 /
.t/ dt:
2 t1
t1
t1
(14.40)
We need to pass to the limit (k ! 1) in the last inequality. From (14.31) and (14.32)
by the AubinLions compactness theorem we conclude that vk ! v strongly in
L2 .t1 ; t2 I H/. From inequality
Z
t2
t2
t1
t1
it follows that jvk .t/j ! jv.t/j strongly in L2 .t1 ; t2 /, and hence, for a subsequence,
jvk .t/j2 ! jv.t/j2 for almost every t 2 .t1 ; t2 /. Since from (14.28) it follows
that functions jvk .t/j2 0 .t/ have an integrable majorant on .t1 ; t2 /, we have, by the
Lebesgue dominated convergence theorem that
Z
t2
jvk .t/j2
Z
.t/ dt !
t1
t2
jv.t/j2
.t/ dt:
(14.41)
t1
1
Now, from (14.31) it follows that vk .t/. .t// 2 ! v.t/. .t// 2 weakly in
L2 .t1 ; t2 I V/ and hence, by the sequential weak lower semicontinuity of the norm
we obtain
Z t2
Z t2
kv.t/k2 .t/ dt lim inf
kvk .t/k2 .t/ dt:
(14.42)
t1
k!1
t1
Thereby, we can pass to the limit in (14.40) which gives us (14.18) and the proof is
complete.
t
u
329
2
1
3
FCloc D fu 2 Lloc
.RC I V/ \ Lloc
.RC I H/ W u0 2 Lloc
.RC I V 0 /g:
Note that F .0; T/ Cw .0; TI H/ and from the LionsMagenes lemma (cf.
Lemma 1.4, Chap. 3 in [219], Theorem II,1.7 in [62] or Lemma 2.1 in [227]) it
follows that for all u 2 F .0; T/ we have
ju.t/j kukL1 .0;TIH/
for all
t 2 0; T:
(14.43)
h0
In the above definition 0;1 u./ is a restriction of u./ to the interval .0; 1/, and
jjvjjF .0;1/ D kvkL2 .0;1IV/ C jjvjjL1 .0;1IH/ C kv 0 k
L 3 .0;1IV 0 /
loc
Finally, we define the topology by C
in the space FCloc in the following way: the
loc
loc
1
if
sequence fuk gkD1 FC is said to converge to u 2 FCloc in the sense of C
330
uk ! u
weakly in
2
Lloc
.RC I V/;
uk ! u
weakly- in
1
Lloc
.RC I H/;
u0k ! u0
weakly in
3
Lloc
.RC I V 0 /:
loc
is stronger than the topology
Note (see, for example, [227]) that the topology C
loc
of Cw .0; TI H/ for all T 0 and hence from the fact that vk ! v in C
it follows
that vk .t/ ! v.t/ weakly in H for all t 0.
In order to show the existence of a trajectory attractor for Problem 14.1 we will use
the following theorem (see, for instance, Theorem 4.1 in [227]).
Theorem 14.2. Assume that the trajectory set K
and that
T.t/K
K C:
(14.44)
Suppose that the semigroup fT.t/gt0 has an attracting set P that is bounded in the
loc
norm of FCb and compact in the topology C
. Then the shift semigroup fT.t/gt0
has a trajectory attractor U P.
We are in position to formulate the main theorem of this section.
Theorem 14.3. The shift semigroup fT.t/gt0 defined on the set K C of solutions
of Problem 14.1 has a trajectory attractor U which is bounded in FCb and compact
loc
in the topology C
.
Before we pass to the proof of this theorem we will need three auxiliary lemmas.
Lemma 14.3. Let v 2 K C . For all h 0 the following estimates hold:
kvk2L2 .h;hC1IV/ C kvk2L1 .h;hC1IH/ C4 C C5 kvk2L1 .0;1IH/ eC6 h ;
(14.45)
kv 0 k 3 4
L 3 .h;hC1IV 0 /
331
8
(14.46)
eC1 1 .t / 1
C2 .1 C kFk2V 0 /:
C1 1
(14.48)
Now, since the function t ! v.t/ is weakly continuous, it follows that t ! jv.t/j2
is lower semicontinuous and (14.48) holds for all t (but only for a.e. 2 RC ).
Hence, for all t > 0 we can find 2 .0; minf1; tg/ such that
jv.t/j2 eC1 1 .t / kvk2L1 .0;1IH/ C
eC1 1 .t /
C2 .1 C kFk2V 0 /;
C1 1
(14.49)
C2 .1 C kFk2V 0 /
:
C1 1
(14.50)
By Corollary 9.2 in [61] it follows from (14.18) that for almost all h > 0,
1
jv.h C 1/j2 C C1
2
hC1
h
1
kv.t/k2 dt C2 .1 C kFk2V 0 / C jv.h/j2 :
2
hC1
h
and the estimate (14.45) follows for all h 0 since both left- and right-hand side of
the above inequality are continuous functions of h. Now, using (14.24) we get
4
2
kv 0 .t/kV3 0 C10 1 C 1 C jv.t/j 3 kv.t/k2
for a.e.
t 2 RC ;
332
hC1
h
Z
2
4=3
kv 0 .t/kV 0 dt C10 C C10 1 C jjv.t/jjL31 .h;hC1IH/
hC1
kv.t/k2 dt:
t
u
loc
C
.
we have
vk ! v
weakly in
2
Lloc
.RC I V/;
vk ! v
weakly- in
1
Lloc
.RC I H/;
vk0 ! v 0
weakly in
3
Lloc
.RC I V /:
C
We need to show that v satisfies (14.16) and (14.18). Since fvk g1
kD1 K , we
have, for all k 2 N and z 2 V,
hvk0 .t/ C Avk .t/ C Bvk .t/; zi C .k .t/; zn /L2 .C / D hF; zi C hG.vk .t//; zi;
2
k .t/ 2 [email protected]
k /n .;t//
for a.e. t 2 RC . Passing to the limit in terms with A; B; G is analogous to that in the
proof of Theorem 14.1 (see also [62, 176, 219, 220]).
In order to pass to the limit in the multivalued term observe that from .j2/ it
follows that for a.e. t 2 RC
kk .t/k2L2 .C / 2c21 m1 .C / C 2c2 k k2 kvk .t/k2 :
Hence, after integration in the time variable we get, for all T 2 RC ,
kk k2L2 .0;TIL2 .C // 2Tc21 L C 2c2 k k2 kvk k2L2 .0;TIV/ :
2
By a diagonal argument it follows that there exists 2 Lloc
.RC I L2 .C // such that,
for a subsequence,
k !
2
weakly in Lloc
.RC I L2 .C //:
2
strongly in Lloc
.RC I L2 .C //:
a.e. in C RC ;
333
and moreover,
2
.t/ 2 [email protected]
n .;t//
a.e. in RC :
Hence we can pass to the limit in the term .k .t/; zn /L2 .C / . It remains to show that
v satisfies (14.18). The argument is similar to that in the proof of Theorem 14.1.
We choose 0 t1 < t2 and
2 C01 ..t1 ; t2 //. We have, after possible refining to
2 0
a subsequence, jvk .t/j .t/ ! jv.t/j2 0 .t/ for a.e. t 2 .t1 ; t2 /. Moreover, since
weakly-* convergent sequences in L1 .t1 ; t2 I H/ are bounded in this space it follows
that there exists a majorant for jvk .t/j2 0 .t/. Hence, by the Lebesgue dominated
1
1
convergence theorem and since vk .t/. .t// 2 ! v.t/. .t// 2 weakly in L2 .t1 ; t2 I V/,
we can pass to the limit in (14.18) written for vk , which completes the proof.
t
u
Proof (of Theorem 14.3). Observe that from Lemma 14.3 it follows that for every
v 2 K C , kvkF b < 1. Note that since the problem is autonomous, for any v 2
C
kT.s/vkF b
n
D sup kvkL2 .h;hC1IV/ C jjv.t/jjL1 .h;hC1IH/ C kv 0 k
4
L3
hs
o
.h;hC1IV 0 /
hs
(14.51)
W kvkF b 2R0 g:
C
We will show that P is absorbing (and hence also attracting) for fT.t/gt0 . Let B
be bounded in FCb . Hence B is bounded in F .0; 1/. Let kvkF .0;1/ R for v 2 B.
Now we choose s0 > 0 such that CR es0 R0 . From (14.51) we have for s s0
that
kT.s/vkF b 2R0 ;
C
334
loc
It suffices to show that P is compact in the topology C
. The fact that it
is relatively compact follows from its boundedness and basic properties of weak
compactness in reflexive Banach spaces. It remains to show that it is closed. Let
loc
C
vk ! v and fvk g P. From the weak lower semicontinuity of the norm it follows
that
kvkF b lim inf kvk kF b 2R0 :
C
k!1
Moreover from Lemma 14.4 it follows that v 2 K C . Thus v 2 P and the proof is
complete.
t
u
Now we show that any section of the trajectory attractor is a weak global attractor.
We will start from the definition of a weak global attractor (cf., e.g., [227]).
Definition 14.4. A set A H is called a weak global attractor of the set K
is weakly compact in H and the following properties hold:
if it
.i/ for any set B K C bounded in the norm of FCb its section B.t/ is attracted to
A in the weak topology of H as t ! 1, that is, for any neighborhood Ow .A /
of A in the weak topology of H there exists a time D .B; Ow .A // such
that
B.t/ Ow .A /
for all
t ;
.ii/ A is the minimal weakly closed set in H that attracts the sections of all bounded
sets in K C in the weak topology of H as t ! 1.
Fig. 14.2 Schematic illustration of trajectory attractor for the semiflow governed by the solution
map of the one-dimensional ODE xP D jxj.1 x/. The trajectory attractor U consists of two
constant trajectories located at the stationary points 0 and 1, and of the family of bounded complete
trajectories that connect those points. The global attractor A is the section of the trajectory attractor
A D U.0/ D U.t/ for all t 2 R
335
336
was studied in [132, 133], where the reaction-diffusion problem with multivalued
semilinear term was considered, and in [123], where the strongly damped wave
equation with multivalued boundary conditions was analyzed.
For the problem considered in this chapter, existence of weak solutions for the
case u D 0 in place of (14.4) was shown in [176]. Our assumptions .j1/.j3/ are
more general than the corresponding assumptions of Theorem 1 in [176], save for
the fact that j is assumed there to depend on space and time variables directly.
To prove the existence of attractors we used the theory of trajectory attractors,
which, instead of the direct analysis of the multivalued semiflow (i.e., map that
assigns to initial condition the set of states obtainable after some time t, see [171,
239] or the review paper [10]), focuses on the shift operator defined on the space
of trajectories for the studied problem. This approach was introduced in papers [60,
167, 210] as a method to avoid the nonuniqueness of solutions, indeed, the shift
operator is uniquely defined even if the dynamics of the problem is governed by the
multivalued semiflow. Recent results and open problems in the theory of trajectory
attractors are discussed in the survey papers [10, 227].
15
X, then also
Any strongly compact (i.e., ds compact) subset of X is also weakly compact (i.e.,
dw compact). Any strongly closed (i.e., ds closed) subset of X is also weakly closed
(i.e., dw closed) and, as a subset of the dw compact set X, also dw compact. To define
the evolutionary system, let
T D fI W I D T; 1/ R
or
I D .1; 1/g:
By F .I/ we denote the set of all X-valued functions having the domain I 2 T .
337
338
E .0; 1// ;,
E .I C s/ D fu./ W u. s/ 2 E .I/g for all s 2 R,
fu./jI2 W u./ 2 E .I1 /g E .I2 / for all I1 ; I2 2 T such that I2 I1 ,
E ..1; 1// D fu./ W u./jT;1/ 2 E .T; 1// for all T 2 Rg.
For I D T; 1/ the set E .I/ is referred to as the set of trajectories on the interval I,
and E ..1; 1// is called the set of complete trajectories. Having the evolutionary
system we can define the map G W 0; 1/ X ! 2X by
G .t; x/ D fu.t/ W u.0/ D x
S
x2A
G .t; x/.
Remark 15.1. If we additionally assume the existence, i.e., that for any x0 2 X there
exists u 2 E .0; 1// such that u.0/ D x0 , then the map G becomes an m-semiflow
in the sense of Melnik and Valero [171], that is:
.i/
.ii/
Fig. 15.1 Illustration of an evolutionary system. If a semiflow (or m-semiflow) is dissipative, i.e.,
has a bounded absorbing set X, then this set, endowed with appropriate metrics becomes the
metric space for the evolutionary system. Moreover, the endings of all trajectories, which must
be contained in the absorbing set (thickened line in the figure), constitute the family E .I/
t!1
339
Assumption .A1/ will yield the invariance of the global attractor. To define the
notion of invariance we first set
GQ.t; A/ D fu.t/ W u.0/ 2 A for
u 2 E ..1; 1//g;
where
A X; t 2 R:
Definition 15.4. The set A X is said to be invariant (in the sense of Foias
Cheskidov) if GQ.t; A/ D A for all t 0.
Remark 15.2. Since GQ.t; A/ G .t; A/, then the fact that A is invariant implies that
A G .t; A/, i.e., A is negatively semi-invariant in the sense of Melnik and Valero
(see [171]).
Theorem 15.2 (cf. [65, Theorem 5.8]). Let E be an evolutionary system that
satisfies .A1/. Then the weak global attractor A is the maximal invariant set.
Moreover,
A D fx 2 X W x D u.0/
for some
u 2 E ..1; 1//g;
where, by invariance, we can also take values at any t 0 instead of zero. Moreover,
for any " > 0 there exists t0 > 0 such that for any t > t0 and for any trajectory
u 2 E .0; 1// we have
dCw .t ;1/IX/ .u; v/ < "
for a certain complete trajectory v 2 E ..1; 1//.
The last assertion of the above theorem is known as the tracking property.
340
h.x1 ; x2 / > 0:
The periodicity of h implies that it suffices to consider the flow inside the domain
D f.x1 ; x2 ; x3 / 2 R3 W .x1 ; x2 / 2 .0; L1 / .0; L2 /; 0 < x3 < h.x; y/g:
Let t0 2 R be the initial time. The momentum equation and the incompressibility
condition are, respectively, given by
ut u C .u r/u C rp D f
div u D 0 on
on
.t0 ; 1/;
.t0 ; 1/;
(15.1)
(15.2)
on
D .t0 ; 1/:
(15.3)
341
u.0; x2 ; x3 ; t/ D u.L1 ; x2 ; x3 ; t/
(15.4)
u.x1 ; 0; x3 ; t/ D u.x1 ; L2 ; x3 ; t/
(15.5)
on C .t0 ; 1/;
(15.6)
T 2 g.u /
on C .t0 ; 1/;
(15.7)
on
for t D t0 :
(15.8)
342
We pass to the weak formulation for the studied problem. First, we define the spaces:
VQ Dfv 2 C1 ./3 W div v D 0 in ;
v D 0 on D ;
and
vn D 0 on C ;
The spaces V H V 0 constitute the evolution triple with dense and continuous
embeddings. Moreover, the embedding V H is compact. As the Dirichlet
1
boundary is nontrivial,
R the norm in the space V equivalent with the standard H 2 norm3
2
is given by kvk D rv.x/W rv.x/ dx. We will also use the space W D L .C /
as well as the linear and continuous trace operator W V ! W, whose norm we
will denote by k kL .VIW/ D k k. The calligraphic symbols will be used for timedependent spaces: V D L2 .t0 ; TI V/, V 0 D L2 .t0 ; TI V 0 /.
To motivate the definition of the weak solution assume that smooth functions
u; p satisfy (15.1)(15.8). Multiplying the momentum equation (15.1) by v 2 VQ
and integrating over , after application of the incompressibility condition (15.2),
the boundary conditions (15.3)(15.7), and integration by parts, we arrive at the
following weak form of the problem,
Z
ut v dx C
Z
ru rv dx C
Z
.u r/u v dx C
C
Z
v dS D
f v dx;
ru.x/W rv.x/ dx
for
u; v 2 V:
343
Obviously, the operator A is linear and bounded, moreover hAu; ui D kuk2 for
u 2 V. We define the Nemytskii operator A W V ! V 0 by the formula .A u/.t/ D
A.u.t// for a.e. t 2 .t0 ; T/. This Nemytskii operator is also linear and bounded,
and hence it is continuous and moreover also weakly sequentially continuous, i.e.,
uk ! u weakly in V implies that A uk ! A u weakly in V 0 . Next, we define the
bilinear operator B W V V ! V 0 as
Z
hB.u; w/; vi D
.u r/w v dx:
(15.9)
hB.u; v/; vi D 0;
(15.10)
(15.11)
and
uk ! u weakly in V
)
(15.12)
for all
v 2 V:
The Nemytskii operator for B has values only in L 3 .t0 ; TI V 0 / and not in V 0 . Indeed,
let us consider the function .t0 ; T/ 3 t ! B.u.t/; v.t// 2 V 0 , where u; v 2 V \
L1 .t0 ; TI H/. We have
Z
kB.u.t/; v.t//kV 0 D sup
kwkD1
kwkD1
(15.13)
(15.14)
and hence
4
344
t0
t0
The result follows by the density of smooth functions in L4 .t0 ; TI V/, a predual space
4
of L 3 .t0 ; TI V 0 /. We have
Z
t0
3 Z
X
i;jD1 t0
.uk .t//i
@wj .t/
.vk .t//j dx dt:
@xi
3 Z
X
i;jD1 t0
.u.t//i
@wj .t/
.v.t//j dx dt D
@xi
t0
t
u
345
a.e. on C g;
a.e. on
C .t0 ; T/g:
.t/ 2 N.v.t//
for a.e.
t 2 .t0 ; T/
for a.e.
u0 v dxC
ruW rv dxC
.ur/uv dxC
C
v dS D hf ; vi;
(15.15)
with 2 N .u /.
Theorem 15.3. Let .g1/.g4/ hold. Problem 15.1 has at least one solution.
Proof. We will prove the existence of solution to this ordinary differential inclusion
by means of the KakutaniFanGlicksberg fixed point theorem (see Theorem 3.8).
Fix 2 L2 .t0 ; TI W/ and w 2 L2 .t0 ; TI V/, and consider the following auxiliary
linear problem.
Problem 15.2. Find u 2 AC.t0 ; TI Vk / such that u.t0 / D Pk u0 and for all v 2 Vk
and a.e. t 2 .t0 ; T/ we have
Z
u0 .t/v dxC
ru.t/W rv dxC
.w.t/r/u.t/v dxC
C
.t/v dS D hf ; vi:
(15.16)
346
It follows that
2kf k2V 0
d
2k k2
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2
k.t/k2W C
:
dt
After integration on .t0 ; t/, for any t 2 .t0 ; T/ we get
Z
ju.t/j C
ku.s/k2 ds ju0 j2 C
t0
2kf k2V 0 .t t0 /
2k k2
kk2L2 .t0 ;tIW/ C
:
In particular,
kuk2V
2kf k2V 0 .T t0 /
1
2k k2
2
ju0 j2 C
kk
C
;
2
L .t0 ;TIW/
2
2
(15.17)
and
ku.t/k2 Ck2 ju.t/j2 Ck2 ju0 j2 C
C2 2kf k2V 0 .T t0 /
Ck2 2k k2
kk2L2 .t0 ;TIW/ C k
;
(15.18)
where the constant Ck depends only on the dimension of the space Vk . Let 2
N .u/. We have
Z
k.t/kW D sup
kzkW D1 C
Z
.x; t/ z.x/ dx sup
kzkW D1 C
p
p
c1 m2 .C / C c2 k u.t/kW c1 L1 L2 C c2 k kku.t/k:
Hence
k.t/k2W 2c21 L1 L2 C 2c22 k k2 ku.t/k2
2c21 L1 L2 C2c22 k k2
(15.19)
!
2
2
Ck2 2kf k2V 0 .Tt0 /
2
2 Ck 2k k
2
kkL2 .t0 ;TIW/ C
Ck ju0 j C
;
(15.20)
,
4c22 Ck2 kk4
347
Consequently, the fixed point argument will give us the existence of solution on
the interval t0 ; T for .T t0 / < 4c2 C2 kk4 , and by subsequent continuation this
2 k
solution can be elongated to arbitrarily long time interval. It remains to prove that
the graph of is weakly closed in S S. In view of the fact that V L2 .t0 ; TI W/
is a reflexive Banach space, and S is a bounded, closed, and convex set, it is enough
to show the sequential weak closedness. Let wk ! w weakly in V and k !
weakly in L2 .0; TI W/, with .wk ; k / 2 S. Let moreover .uk ; k / 2 .wk ; k / be
such that uk ! u weakly in V and k ! weakly in L2 .t0 ; TI W/. We know that
.uk ; k / 2 S. Let us introduce an equivalent norm on the finite dimensional space Vk
by the formula
Z
kzk
Vk0
sup
v2Vk ;kvkD1
z v dx:
We have
Z
kvkD1
kvkD1
Z
hf ; vi
ruk .t/W rv dx
C
k .t/ v dS
2
1
3
u 2 Lloc
.t0 ; 1/I V/ \ Lloc
.t0 ; 1/I H/ with u0 2 Lloc
.t0 ; 1/I V 0 / such that:
u.t0 / D u0 ;
for all v 2 V and a.e. t > t0 we have
348
Z
C
.t/ v dS D 0;
(15.21)
2
with 2 Lloc
.t0 ; 1/I W/ such that .t/ 2 N.u .t// for a.e. t > t0 ,
for a.e. t t0 (including t0 ) and for all s > t we have
1
ju.s/j2 C
2
ku.r/k dr C
1
ju.t/j2 :
2
(15.22)
Remark 15.3. Every type I LerayHopf weak solution defined above belongs to the
spaces C.t0 ; 1/I V 0 / and Cw .t0 ; 1/I H/. Moreover, (15.22) implies that ju.t/j2 is
continuous from the right at t0 .
Theorem 15.4. Assume .g1/.g5/. For any u0 2 H there exists at least one type I
LerayHopf weak solution given by Definition 15.5.
Proof. The proof is standard in the theory of three-dimensional NavierStokes
equations and it is based on the Galerkin method. It is enough to prove, for certain
given T > t0 , the existence of a function u 2 L2 .t0 ; TI V/ \ L1 .t0 ; TI H/ with
4
u0 2 L 3 .t0 ; TI V 0 / and corresponding 2 L2 .t0 ; TI W/ which satisfies the initial
condition, (15.21) for a.e. t 2 .t0 ; T/, and (15.22) for a.e. t 2 .t0 ; T/ and for t D t0 .
The solution on the interval .t0 ; 1/ can then be obtained by concatenating the weak
solutions obtained on the intervals of length T t0 by taking the value of the previous
solution at the endpoint of the time interval as the initial condition for the subsequent
problem. We will proceed in the standard way obtaining the LerayHopf weak
solution by passing to the limit in the Galerkin problems. Let uk 2 AC.t0 ; TI Vk /
be the solutions of Problem 15.1 with the initial condition Pk u0 . We denote by k the
corresponding selections of N ..uk / /. Taking v D uk .t/ in (15.15) we get for a.e.
t 2 .t0 ; T/,
1d
juk .t/j2 C kuk .t/k2 C
2 dt
Z
C
(15.23)
Z
C
C
c21 m2 .C /
:
4
(15.24)
Z
C
349
(15.25)
It suffices to take " D 4 . Now, we use the Gronwall lemma (cf. Lemma 3.20) to
deduce that uk is uniformly bounded in V and L1 .t0 ; TI H/. To prove that k is
bounded in L2 .t0 ; TI W/ we observe that
kk .t/k2W
Z
C
(15.26)
The last two bounds imply that u0k is bounded in L 3 .t0 ; TI V 0 /. Thus, for a
subsequence, not renumbered, we have
uk ! u weakly in V ;
(15.27)
1
(15.28)
350
u0k ! u0
(15.29)
L2 .t0 ; TI H/;
(15.30)
uk ! u strongly in
uk .t/ ! u.t/
strongly in
C.t0 ; TI V 0 /;
uk ! u strongly in
uk .t/ ! u.t/
k !
.uk / ! u
weakly in H
(15.32)
t 2 t0 ; T;
for all
(15.33)
(15.34)
L2 .t0 ; TI W/:
strongly in
(15.31)
(15.35)
fu 2 V W u0 2 L 3 .t0 ; TI V 0 /g
L2 .t0 ; TI H/;
fu 2 L1 .t0 ; TI H/ W u0 2 L 3 .t0 ; TI V 0 /g
C.t0 ; TI V 0 /;
L2 .0; TI Z/;
fu 2 L2 .t0 ; TI V/ W u0 2 L 3 .t0 ; TI V 0 /g
and the continuity of the Nemytskii trace operator from L2 .0; TI Z/ to L2 .0; TI W/.
The convergence (15.33) follows by the computation
Z
.uk .t/; v/ D .Pk u0 ; v/ C
t
t0
t0
t0
Using (15.27), (15.29), (15.30), (15.33), and Lemma 15.1 we can pass to the limit
in above equation, getting
Z
T
t0
t0
..t/; v '.t//W dt D 0;
15.4 Existence and Invariance of Weak Global Attractor, and Weak Tracking. . .
351
S1
1
valid for v 2
kD1 Vk and ' 2 C ..t0 ; T//, whence (15.21) follows. Integrating (15.23) on .t; s/ we get, for all t; s with t0 t < s T,
1
juk .s/j2 C
2
kuk .r/k2 dr C
1
juk .t/j2 :
2
(15.36)
Using (15.27), (15.31), (15.34), and (15.35) as well as the sequential weak lower
semicontinuity of the norm of the space L2 .t; sI V/ we get, for a.e. t 2 .t0 ; T/ and
a.e. s 2 .t; T/,
Z
1
ju.s/j2 C
2
ku.r/k2 dr C
1
ju.t/j2 :
2
The convergence (15.33) and the sequential weak lower semicontinuity of the norm
j j imply that the last inequality holds for all s 2 t; T. Integrating (15.23) on .t0 ; s/
we get, for all s 2 .t0 ; T,
1
juk .s/j2 C
2
kuk .r/k dr C
t0
t0
1
jPk u0 j2 :
2
As we did in (15.36), we can pass to the limit in the above inequality, to get
1
ju.s/j2 C
2
t0
ku.r/k2 dr C
t0
1
ju0 j2 :
2
We have proved (15.22). The fact that u.t0 / D u0 follows from (15.33) for t D t0 and
the fact that uk .0/ D Pk u0 ! u0 strongly in H as k ! 1. Finally, (15.34), (15.35),
and assertion .H2/ of Theorem 3.23 imply that 2 N .u /. The proof is complete.
t
u
Remark 15.4. There are two sources of possible nonuniqueness of LerayHopf
weak solution of the studied problem. First, the nonlinear term B which, in
three-dimensional case, makes the weak solution uniqueness unknown (cf., e.g.,
[99, 219]), and, moreover, the nonmonotone friction multifunction g which also can
contribute to the lack of solution uniqueness.
352
./ d
.t/;
.s/ C c
t
.t/
.t0 /ec.tt0 /
for all
t t0 :
We use the above lemma to get a dissipativity result for type I LerayHopf weak
solutions.
Lemma 15.3. If u is a type I LerayHopf weak solution given by Definition 15.5,
then for all t t0 we have
ju.t/j2 e1 .d2 kk
2 /.tt /
0
ju0 j2 C
kf k2V 0 C 2d1 L1 L2 . d2 k k2 /
:
1 . d2 k k2 /2
(15.37)
ku.r/k dr C
1
ju.t/j2 C "
2
Z sZ
t
C
ku.r/k2 dr C
kf k2V 0 .s t/
;
4"
for all s t and for a.e. t > t0 and for t D t0 , where " > 0 is arbitrary. Using the
trace inequality, we get
1
ju.s/j2 C. d2 k k2 "/
2
We take " D
we get
d2 kk2
.
2
s
t
!
kf k2V 0
1
2
Cd1 L1 L2 .st/:
ku.r/k dr ju.t/j C
2
4"
2
ju.s/j2 C 1 . d2 k k2 /
ju.r/j2 dr
!
kf k2V 0
C 2d1 L1 L2 .s t/:
d2 k k2
ju.t/j2 C
Denote A D 1 . d2 k k2 / and B D
ju.s/j2
B
CA
A
s
t
kf k2V 0
d2 kk2
ju.r/j2
C 2d1 L1 L2 . We have
B
B
dr ju.t/j2 :
A
A
15.4 Existence and Invariance of Weak Global Attractor, and Weak Tracking. . .
353
Directly
Lemma 15.4. Let K H be a bounded set, and let t0 2 R. For every type I Leray
Hopf weak solution u with the initial condition u.t0 / D u0 2 K there exists a time
t1 D t1 .t0 ; K/ such that for all t t1 u.t/ 2 X.
We endow X with two metrics. The strong metric ds W X X ! 0; 1/ is given by
ds .u; v/ D ju vj. As the weak topology of H is metrizable on the closed ball X we
can define the metric dw W X X ! 0; 1/ such that dw .uk ; u/ ! 0 if and only if
uk ! u weakly in H. Note that the set X is compact in dw .
We need to define a class of type II LerayHopf weak solutions (see [65, 66]).
Definition 15.6. By the type II LerayHopf solution of the three-dimensional
NavierStokes problem with multivalued friction we mean a function u 2
4
2
1
3
Lloc
.t0 ; 1/I V/ \ Lloc
.t0 ; 1/I H/ with u0 2 Lloc
.t0 ; 1/I V 0 / such that:
Z
C
.t/ v dS D 0;
(15.38)
2
with 2 Lloc
.t0 ; 1I W/ such that .t/ 2 N.u .t// for a.e. t > t0 ,
for a.e. t t0 (not necessarily for t0 ) and for all s > t we have
1
ju.s/j2 C
2
Z
t
ku.r/k2 dr C
Z
t
1
ju.t/j2 :
2
(15.39)
Note that every type I LerayHopf weak solution is a type II LerayHopf weak
solution. Moreover, a restriction of either type I or type II LerayHopf weak solution
given on interval t0 ; 1/ to a smaller interval T; 1/ t0 ; 1/ is always a type
II LerayHopf weak solution on T; 1/. It is, however, impossible to concatenate
354
type II LerayHopf weak solutions, as the energy inequality (15.39) does not have
to hold at the initial time t D t0 . We can define
E .T; 1// Dfu W u
and
u.t/ 2 X
for all
T; 1/;
t Tg:
(15.40)
Obviously, E .T; 1// satisfies the first three axioms of Definition 15.1, and hence
it defines the evolutionary system with E ..1; 1// given by axiom .iv/ of
Definition 15.1. We can use Theorem 15.1 to conclude the following result on the
existence of a weak global attractor.
Theorem 15.5. The evolutionary system defined by (15.40) has a weak global
attractor A .
To study the attractor invariance we need the next result.
Theorem 15.6. Let uk be the sequence of type II LerayHopf weak solutions on
t0 ; 1/ such that uk .t/ 2 X for all t t0 . Let T > t0 be given arbitrarily. Then there
exists a subsequence, not renumbered, which converges in Cw .t0 ; TI H/ to some
type II LerayHopf weak solution u, i.e.,
.uk .t/; v/ ! .u.t/; v/
uniformly on
t0 ; T
for all v 2 H
as
k ! 1:
Proof. Let the sequence tm ! t0 be such that (15.39) holds for t D tm . Proceeding
in the same way as in the proof of Lemma 15.3 we get
Z
kuk .r/k2 dr C;
tm
weakly in V ;
uk ! u
u0k ! u0
uk ! u
uk .t/ ! u.t/
uk ! u
uk .t/ ! u.t/
strongly in H
(15.41)
15.4 Existence and Invariance of Weak Global Attractor, and Weak Tracking. . .
k !
.uk / ! u
355
Now, exactly the same as in the proof of Theorem 15.4, it follows that u satisfies (15.38) and (15.39) for a.e. t 2 .t0 ; T/, whence u is a certain type II LerayHopf
weak solution. To show the uniform convergence in Cw .t0 ; TI H/, let v 2 H and let
" > 0. We can find v" 2 V with jv" vj ". We have
sup j.uk .t/ u.t/; v/j D sup jhuk .t/ u.t/; v" i C .uk .t/ u.t/; v v" /j
t2t0 ;T
t2t0 ;T
p
sup kuk .t/ u.t/kV 0 kv" k C 2 R";
t2t0 ;T
where we have used the fact that uk .t/; u.t/ 2 X. We pass with k ! 1 and
use (15.41), to get
p
lim sup sup j.uk .t/ u.t/; v/j 2 R":
k!1 t2t0 ;T
As " was arbitrary, it follows that limk!1 supt2t0 ;T j.uk .t/ u.t/; v/j D 0, and the
proof is complete.
t
u
Theorem 15.7. E .0; 1// is compact in Cw .0; 1/I H/.
Proof. The proof follows the lines of the proof of Lemma 3.12 in [66]. Take any
sequence uk 2 E .0; 1//. By Theorem 15.6 there exists a subsequence, still denoted
by uk , which converges in Cw .0; 1I H/ to some u1 , a type II LerayHopf solution.
Passing again to subsequence, not renumbered, uk converges in Cw .0; 2I H/ to
some u2 , a type II LerayHopf solution such that u1 D u2 on 0; 1. Continuing
this diagonalization process, uk converges in Cw .0; 1/I H/ to some u, a type II
LerayHopf solution. As ju.t/j lim infk!1 juk .t/j for all t 0, it follows that
u.t/ 2 X, and in consequence u 2 E .0; 1//. The proof is complete.
t
u
As we have shown that .A1/ holds, we can use Theorem 15.2 to conclude the last
result of this section.
Theorem 15.8. The weak global attractor A is a maximal invariant set. Moreover,
A D fx 2 X W x D u.0/
for some
u 2 E ..1; 1//g;
and the tracking property holds, i.e., for every " > 0 there exists t0 > 0 such that
for any t > t0 and for any trajectory u 2 E .0; 1// we have
dCw .t ;1/IX/ .u; v/ < "
for a certain complete trajectory v 2 E ..1; 1//.
356
357
regularity results in three-dimensional case and global regularity results in twodimensional case for periodic boundary conditions). There are many additional
conditions under which the weak solution becomes strong and the associated weak
global attractor is the strong one, too, but so far it remains an open problem whether
any of such conditions is in fact satisfied [34, 6668, 73, 82, 143, 144, 189]. Only
such conditional results are available on the existence of strong global attractor in
the three-dimensional case [65, 66, 128, 202]. An interesting recent idea is to use the
results of numerical simulations to verify the existence of strong solutions [64]. A lot
of work has been put in recent years to study the partial regularity of solutions. This
work includes the analysis of the so-called singular set of the weak solutions, i.e.,
the set of space-time points such that the solution is unbounded in the neighborhood
of such points, this work started from the works of Scheffer [205] and Caffarelli et
al. [32]. For the recent progress in such studies see the forthcoming book [200].
There are some approaches relying on the modifications or simplifications of
three-dimensional equations to improve their properties, for example, one can study
globally modified NavierStokes equations [47, 48, 139], NavierStokes equations
with fractional operators [86], or -model [45, 63, 100].
16
359
360
If the set A H is bounded, than we define its Kuratowski measure of noncompactness
.A/ (cf. [144]) as
.A/ D finf > 0 W A has finite open cover of sets of diameter less than g:
For the properties of
, see, for example, [111, 125]. Subsets of R H will be called
non-autonomous sets. For a non-autonomous set D R H we identify D with the
family of its fibers, i.e.,
D D fD.t/gt2R ;
where
x 2 D.t/ , .x; t/ 2 D:
A family D of non-autonomous sets such that for every D 2 D and all t 2 R the
fiber D.t/ is nonempty (i.e., D.t/ 2 P.H/) is called an attraction universe over H.
We denote Rd D f.t; / 2 R2 W t g.
Definition 16.1. The map U W Rd H ! P.H/ is called a multivalued process
(m-process) if:
(1) U.; ; z/ D z for all z 2 H,
(2) U.t; ; z/ U.t; s; U.s; ; z// for all z 2 H and all t s .
If in (2), in place of inclusion we have the equality U.t; ; z/ D U.t; s; U.s; ; z//,
then the m-process is said to be strict.
Definition 16.2. Let D be an attraction universe over H. The m-process U in H is
pullback !-D-limit compact if for every D D fD. /g 2R 2 D and t 2 R we have
!
U.t; ; D. // ! 0
as
s ! 1:
s
361
1
For every k 2 N and m such that tmC1 k we have
.fi g1
iDmC1 / k ,
1
1
whence
.fi giD1 / D 0. This proves, in turn, the precompactness of fi giD1 , and,
in consequence, the pullback D-asymptotic compactness of U.
Now let U be pullback D-asymptotically compact. We shall prove first that for
every D 2 D and t 2 R the set
!.D; t/ D
\[
U.t; ; D. //
(16.2)
st s
is nonempty.
Indeed, let tk ! 1 and k 2 U.t; tk ; D.tk // and let, for a subsequence, still
denotedSby k, k ! . For every s t and every indexSk such that tk s, we have
k 2
s U.t; ; D. //. Since k ! , then 2
s U.t; ; D. // for every
s t. Thus 2 !.D; t/.
Now we prove that for every D 2 D and every t 2 R,
distH .U.t; ; D. //; !.D; t// ! 0 as
! 1:
Assume, to the contrary, that there exists the non-autonomous set D 2 D, the
number Nt 2 R, and the sequences tk ! 1 and k 2 U.Nt; tk ; D.tk // such
that distH .k ; !.D; t// > 0. By the asymptotic compactness property, for a
subsequence, still denoted by k, we have k ! in H. But 2 !.D; t/, which gives
a contradiction.
Let D 2 D, t 2 R and let xn be a sequence in !.D; t/. We prove that this sequence
has a subsequence that converges to some element in !.D; t/ and thus the set !.D; t/
is compact. As
xn 2
U.t; ; D. //
for every
s t;
s
then, for any sequence tk ! 1 there exists mk 2 U.t; tmk ; D.tmk // such that
.xk ; mk / 1k . By pullback D-asymptotic compactness, there exists a subsequence
of mk converging to some 2 !.D; t/. Thus, also x ! .
S Now let us fix > 0. We need to show that there exists s < t such that the set
s U.t; ; D. // can be covered by a finite number of sets with diameter . From
compactness of !.D; t/ it follows that there exists a finite number of points fxi gkiD1
S
such that !.D; t/ kiD1 B.xi ; 2 /: Now choose s < t such that
distH .U.t; ; D. //; !.D; t// <
"
;
2
Sk
iD1
B.xi ; /
t
u
362
! 1;
(4) if C is a non-autonomous set such that C.t/ are closed for t 2 R and C is
pullback D-attracting then A.t/ C.t/ for every t 2 R (minimality property).
Remark 16.1. Condition (4) in the above definition implies that pullback
D-attractor is always defined uniquely.
Remark 16.2. If we assume that, by definition, A 2 D then condition (4)
(minimality) follows from conditions (1)(3). In such a case, by Remark 16.1,
conditions (1)(3) suffice to guarantee the uniqueness of A.
The minimality property can be proved as follows. Suppose that there exists a
non-autonomous set C such that C.t/ are closed for all t 2 R, C is attracting,
and for some t 2 R, C.t/ A.t/ with proper inclusion. As A 2 D, we have
distH .U.t; ; A. //; C.t// ! 0 for ! 1. But A.t/ U.t; ; A. //, and we
have distH .A.t/; C.t// distH .U.t; ; A.t//; C.t// ! 0 as ! 1, whence
A.t/ C.t/, a contradiction.
Definition 16.6. The m-process U on H is closed if for all t the graph of the
multivalued mapping x ! U.t; ; x/ is a closed set in the product topology on HH.
Now we formulate a theorem about the existence of pullback D-attractors in
complete metric spaces. A similar result is proved in [4, 35, 169] (see also [171, 172]
for the case of m-semiflows and [41, 239] for the case of the universe of bounded
and constant in time sets).
Theorem 16.1. Let H be a complete metric space and let the m-process U on H be
closed. Assume that
(i) U has a pullback D-absorbing non-autonomous set B 2 D.
(ii) U is pullback !-D-limit compact (equivalently, U is pullback D-asymptotically
compact).
Then there exists a pullback D-attractor for U.
363
\[
U.t; ; B.//;
(16.3)
st s
!
U.t; ; B. // ! 0
as
s ! 1:
(16.4)
s
S
Since the sets Xs D s U.t; ; B. // are nonempty, bounded, and closed in
H, and the family of sets fXs gst is nonincreasing as s ! 1, we can apply a
well-known property of
(cf., e.g., [111]) to get the claims.
Step 3. Attraction property. Since for every t 2 R, every non-autonomous set
D 2 D, and every r t it is U.t; ; D. // U.t; r; U.r; ; D. ///
U.t; r; B.r// for all 0 , for some 0 .D; r/ r, it suffices to prove that
distH .U.t; ; B. //; A.t// ! 0 as ! 1. We argue by contradiction. Assume,
to the contrary, that there exist sequences k ! 1 and k 2 U.t; k ; B.k //
such that infy2A.t/ %.k ; y/ > 0. By the pullback D-asymptotic compactness
property, there exists a convergent subsequence, ! in H, and by the
definition of the pullback D-attractor in (16.3), 2 A.t/, which gives a
contradiction.
Step 4. We prove that A.t/ U.t; ; A. // for all t. Let x 2 A.t/ and t.
We shall prove that x 2 U.t; ; p/ for some p 2 A. /. Since x 2 A.t/ defined
in (16.3), there exist tk ! 1 and k 2 U.t; tk ; B.tk // such that k ! x in H. We
have
k 2 U.t; tk ; B.tk // U.t; ; U.; tk ; B.tk ///
for large k, whence there exist zk 2 B.tk / such that k 2 U.t; ; U.; tk ; zk //,
and pk 2 U.; tk ; zk / such that k 2 U.t; ; pk /. By the pullback D-asymptotic
compactness it follows that for a subsequence of fpk g we have p ! p in H.
From (16.3) it follows that p 2 A. /. Since ! x and p ! p with 2
U.t; ; p /, from the fact that U is closed it follows that x 2 U.t; ; p/. The proof
is complete.
Step 5. To prove the minimality property assume that there exists a pullback Dattracting non-autonomous set C such that C.t/ are closed. Then due to the fact
that B 2 D we have distH .U.t; ; B. //; C.t// ! 0 as ! 1 . Let x 2 A.t/.
By (16.3) there exist sequences k ! 1 and k 2 U.t; k ; B.k // such that
k ! x, whereas, as C.t/ is closed, we have x 2 C.t/ and the proof is complete.
t
u
364
Remark 16.3. The above theorem still holds if we assume that, in definition of the
pullback D-asymptotic compactness, any set D 2 D is replaced with the pullback
D-absorbing set B. In such a case this set does not have to belong to the universe D
(see [4, 35, 169]).
Remark 16.4. The existence of the pullback D-attractor implies condition (ii) in the
above theorem, that is, the !-D-limit compactness of U. To prove it we follow the
argument provided, e.g., in [240]. Denote by O" .A.t// the closed "-neighborhood of
A.t/. Since the set A.t/ is compact, then
.A.t// D 0, and
.O" .A.t/// 2". From
the attraction property of A, for any D 2 D we have distH .U.t; ; D. //; A.t// 2"
for all 0 for some 0 .D; t/. Thus
!
U.t; ; D. // 2";
0
Fig. 16.1 Illustration of the example in Remark 16.5. The identity semiflow has a pullback
D-attractor but it does not have a pullback D-absorbing non-autonomous set in D
It is natural to ask what assumptions on the universe D are required to guarantee that
existence of pullback D-attractor implies (i). We make the following assumptions:
(HD1) The universe D is inclusion-closed, that is if D D fD.t/g t2R 2 D and
D0 D fD0 .t/gt2R is such that D0 .t/ D.t/ and D0 .t/ 2 P.H/ for all t 2 R, then
D0 2 D.
(HD2) If D D fD.t/gt2R 2 D, then there exists " > 0 such that the nonautonomous set fO" .D.t//gt2R also belongs to D.
Corollary 16.1. Let the universe D satisfy (HD1) and let the m-process U satisfy
the assumptions of Theorem 16.1. Then we have A 2 D. If we moreover assume that
U is strict then A is invariant, i.e., U.t; ; A. // D A.t/ for all t 2 R and t.
365
Proof. The proof follows the lines of the proofs of item (6) in Theorem 3 in [169]
and items (5) (6) in Theorem 3.10 in [4]. Since B is pullback D-absorbing we have
distH .U.t; ; D. //; B.t// D 0 for all D 2 D and t0 .D; t/. Hence as ! 1
we have distH .U.t; ; D. //; B.t// ! 0 and fB.t/gt2R is pullback D-attracting. Then
from the attractor minimality we have A.t/ B.t/ and the assertion follows from
(HD1).
For the proof of the positive invariance, let t be fixed and let r 0. We have
U.t; ; A. // U.t; ; U.; C r; A. C r/// D U.t; C r; A. C r//:
Since A 2 D, it pullback attracts itself, and
lim distH .U.t; C r; A. C r//; A.t// D 0:
r!1
Hence
lim distH .U.t; ; A. //; A.t// D 0
r!1
and distH .U.t; ; A. //; A.t// D 0, whence, by the closedness of A.t/, it follows that
U.t; ; A. // A.t/ and the assertion is proved.
t
u
Corollary 16.2. Let the universe D satisfy (HD2) and let the m-process U have the
pullback D-attractor A 2 D. Then U has a pullback D-absorbing non-autonomous
set B 2 D.
Proof. Define B.t/ D O" .A.t//, where " is given in (HD2). Then B D fB.t/gt2R
belongs to D. Suppose, on the contrary, that B.t/ is not pullback D-absorbing.
This means that there exist sequences tk ! 1 and k 2 U.t; tk ; D.tk // such
that for large k we have k 62 B.t/. From Remark 16.4 it follows that U is
pullback D-asymptotically compact, and, for a subsequence, ! . As A is
pullback D-attracting and A.t/ is closed, we have 2 A.t/, a contradiction with
k 62 O" .A.t//.
t
u
Summarizing, we have a following theorem which is a consequence of Theorem 16.1, Remark 16.4, and Corollaries 16.1 and 16.2.
Theorem 16.2. Let D be a universe of non-autonomous sets satisfying (HD1) and
(HD2) and let U be a closed m-process. Then U has a pullback D-attractor A
belonging to D if and only if U is pullback D-asymptotically compact and has a
pullback D-absorbing non-autonomous set B 2 D:
In the sequel of this section we confine ourselves to Banach spaces where we will
consider both strong and weak topologies. We introduce condition (NW), norm-toweak, that generalizes to the non-autonomous multivalued case the norm-to-weak
continuity assumed in [240] for semigroups (see Definition 3.4 in [240]) and in
[125] for multivalued semiflows (see Definition 2.11 in [125]). A similar condition
is introduced for the non-autonomous multivalued case in [231] (see condition (3) in
366
Definition 2.6 in [231]), where only the strict case is considered and, instead of a
subsequence, whole sequence is assumed to converge weakly.
Definition 16.7. The m-process U on a Banach space H satisfies condition (NW) if
for every t 2 R and t, from xk ! x in H and k 2 U.t; ; xk / it follows that there
exists a subsequence fmk g, such that mk ! weakly in H with 2 U.t; ; x/.
Lemma 16.2. If a multivalued process U on a Banach space H satisfies condition
(NW) then it is closed.
Proof. An elementary proof follows directly from the definitions.
t
u
From Theorem 16.1 together with Lemma 16.2 we have the following
Corollary 16.3. If the m-process U on a Banach space H has a pullback Dabsorbing non-autonomous set B 2 D, is pullback D-asymptotically compact
(equivalently, !-D-limit compact), and satisfies condition (NW) then there exists
a pullback D-attractor for U.
The above corollary provides useful criteria of existence of pullback D-attractors
for multivalued processes. In the next section we apply them to study the time
asymptotic behavior of solutions of a problem originating from contact mechanics.
.t0 ; 1/;
(16.5)
(16.6)
367
D .t0 ; 1/:
(16.7)
On the contact boundary C we decompose the velocity into the normal component
un D u n, where n is the unit outward normal vector, and the tangential one u D
u e1 . Note that since the domain is two-dimensional it is possible to consider the
tangential components as scalars, for the sake of the ease of notation. Likewise, we
decompose the stress on the boundary C into its normal component Tn D Tn n
and the tangential one T D Tn e1 . The stress tensor is related to the velocity and
pressure through the linear constitutive law Tij D pij C .ui;j C uj;i /.
We assume that there is no flux across C ,
un .t/ D 0
on C .t0 ; 1/;
(16.8)
on C .t0 ; 1/:
(16.9)
in
(16.10)
368
elasticity, see Fig. 4.6 in [12] and Fig. 2(a) in [213] for examples of particular
nonmonotone friction laws that satisfy the assumptions .j1/.j4/ listed below.
Complex nonmonotone behavior of the friction force density is related to the
presence of asperities on the surface [191]. Similar friction law is also used, for
example, in the study of the motion of tectonic plates, see [119, 190, 207] and the
references therein.
Weak Formulation and Existence of Solutions We introduce the variational
formulation of the problem and, for the convenience of the readers, we describe
the relations between the classical and the weak formulations.
We begin with some basic definitions. Let
VQ D fu 2 C1 ./2 W div u D 0 in ;
u D 0 at D ;
u is L-periodic in x1 ;
u n D 0 at C g
and
V D closure of VQ in H 1 ./2 ;
H D closure of VQ in L2 ./2 :
Z
.u ; w/ D
u.x/ w.x/ dx
and
.ru ; rw/ D
juj D .u; u/ 2
and
and
369
with u0 2 L2 .t0 ; TI V 0 /;
and
hu0 .t/ C Au.t/ C Bu.t/; zi C ..t/; z /L2 .C / D hf .t/; zi;
(16.11)
2
.t/ 2 [email protected];u
.t//
(16.12)
2
f 2 Lloc
.RI H/,
for certain t 2 R (and thus for all t 2 R) we have
1
e.dkk
2 / s
1
jf .s/j2 ds < 1;
(16.13)
370
u0 .t/ z dx C
Z
Z
D
@
Z
Tij .u.t/; p.t//nj zi dS C
f .t/ z dx
(16.14)
for t 2 .t0 ; 1/. As u.t/ and z are in V, after some calculations we obtain
Z
(16.15)
Z
@
C
Z
T .u.t/; p.t//z dS C
C
and the last integral equals zero as z satisfies (16.8) a.e. on C . Thus, (16.11) holds.
Conversely, suppose that u is a sufficiently smooth solution to Problem 16.1. We
have immediately (16.6)(16.8) and (16.10). Now, let z be in the space
.H01 .div; //2 D fz 2 V W z D 0 on @ g:
We take such z in (16.11) to get
hu0 .t/ u.t/ C .u.t/ r/u.t/ f .t/ ; zi D 0 for every
in
Z
C
L
C
T .t/z dS D 0:
371
By (16.16) we have (16.13) and so the first integral on the left-hand side vanishes.
In the same way as in the proof of Proposition 10.1 we assume enough smoothness
of the classical solution, such that the Cauchy stress vector Tn on L is L-periodic
with respect to x1 . This means that the second integral
R on the left-hand side of the
last equality vanishes for any z 2 V. Thus we get C .T /z dS. Analogously
to the proof of Proposition 10.1, we use the results of Chapter 1.2 in [146] on the
extension of smooth functions on the boundary to divergence free vector fields to
deduce that in the last inequality z can be replaced by any sufficiently smooth
function. It follows that T D for a.e. x 2 C and the proof is complete.
t
u
Theorem 16.3. Assuming .f 1/, and .j1/.j3/, Problem 16.1 has a solution.
The proof uses the standard approach by the mollification of the nonsmooth term
and the Galerkin method. Since it is, on one hand, technical and quite involved, and,
on the other hand the methodology is the same as in the proof of Theorem 10.8 in
Chap. 10 and Theorem 14.1 in Chap. 14, with the necessary modifications for the
non-autonomous terms, we skip the proof here.
Multivalued Process and Its Attractor We associate with Problem 16.1 the
multifunction U W Rd H ! P.H/, where U.t; t0 ; u0 / is the set of states attainable
at time t from the initial condition u0 taken at time t0 . Observe that U is a strict
m-process.
2
Lemma 16.3. Assume .f 1/, .j1/.j4/. If the function u 2 Lloc
.t0 ; C1I V/ with
2
0
0
u 2 Lloc .t0 ; C1I V / solves Problem 16.1, then
d
ju.t/j2 C . dk k2 /ku.t/k2 C1 .1 C jf .t/j2 /;
dt
(16.18)
(16.19)
for
w2V
(16.20)
to get
1d
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2 C ..t/; u .t//L2 .C / D .f .t/; u.t//;
2 dt
2
for a.e. t t0 . From .j4/ we obtain, with arbitrary " > 0,
where .t/ 2 [email protected];u
.t//
1d
"
1
ju.t/j2 C ku.t/k2 ku.t/k2 C kf .t/k2V 0 C dku .t/k2L2 .C / cL:
2 dt
2
2"
372
(16.21)
Now (16.19) follows directly from the growth condition .j3/ and the trace inequality.
t
u
Denote D . dk k2 /1 and define R.t/ by
R.t/2 D
C1
C C1
1
es jf .s/j2 ds C 1
for t 2 R:
(16.22)
By .f 2/ the quantity R.t/ is well defined and finite. We denote by R the family of
all functions r W R ! .0; 1/ such that
lim et r2 .t/ D 0:
t!1
for a.e.
s 2 .; t/:
373
C1
C C1 et
t
(16.23)
Hence
ju.t/j2 ju. /j2 e.t / C R2 .t/ 1:
Since u. / 2 D. /, then
ju.t/j2 rD . /2 e et 1 C R2 .t/:
Due to the bound rD . /2 e et , we have
ju.t/j2 R2 .t/;
whence the assertion follows.
t
u
We pass to the next lemma which states that the m-process U is D -pullback
asymptotically compact.
Lemma 16.5. Assume .f 1/.f 2/ and .j1/.j4/. The m-process U is D -asymptotically compact.
Proof. The proof uses the technique of Proposition 7.4 in [11] (alternatively it is
also possible to obtain the same assertion by the method of [201]) and is based on
the energy equation. Let fD.t/gt2R D D 2 D and let uk0 2 D.t0k / with t0k ! 1.
Let moreover zk 2 U.t; t0k ; uk0 /. We show that the sequence fzk g is relatively compact
in H. There exists a sequence of functions uk 2 L2 .t0k ; t C 1I V/ \ C.t0k ; t C 1I H/
with u0n 2 L2 .t0k ; t C 1I V 0 /, solutions of Problem 16.1, such that uk .t0k / D uk0 and
uk .t/ D zk . From Lemma 16.4 it follows that there exists N0 such that for all natural
k N0 we have juk .t 1/j R.t 1/. From now on we will consider the sequence
2
fuk g1
kDN0 . The selections of [email protected];uk .t// given in (16.12) will be denoted by k . Note
that the restrictions of uk ; k to the interval t 1; t C 1 solve Problem 16.1 on this
interval, with the initial conditions uk .t 1/ taken at t 1. Using (16.18) it follows
that the sequence uk is uniformly bounded in L2 .t 1; t C 1I V/ \ C.t 1; t C 1I H/,
and, by (16.19) it follows that u0k is uniformly bounded in L2 .t 1; t C 1I V 0 /. The
growth condition .j3/ implies that k are bounded in L2 .t 1; t C 1I L2 .C //. These
bounds are sufficient to extract a subsequence, not renumbered, such that for certain
u 2 L2 .t 1; t C 1I V/ with u0 2 .t 1; t C 1I V 0 / and 2 L2 .t 1; t C 1I L2 .C //
the following convergences hold:
374
uk ! u
weakly in L2 .t 1; t C 1I V/;
u0k ! u0
weakly in L2 .t 1; t C 1I V 0 /;
uk ! u
strongly in L2 .t 1; t C 1I H/;
(16.24)
uk .s/ ! u.s/
weakly in H
uk ! u
(16.26)
(16.27)
k !
s 2 t 1; t C 1;
for all
(16.25)
t1
1
D juk .t 1/j2 C
2
t1
s
(16.28)
t1
1
juk .t 1/j2
2
t1
Note that the coercivity of a implies that the functions Vk are nonincreasing. By the
energy equation (16.28) we have
1
Vk .s/ D juk .s/j2 C
2
t1
t1
k!1
1
ju.s/j2 C
2
t1
Z
..r/; u .r//L2 .C / dr
.f .r/; u.r// dr
t1
for a.e. s 2 .t 1; t C 1/. We denote the right-hand side of the above equation by
V.s/. We can choose sequences pm % t and qm & t such that Vk .pm / ! V.pm / and
Vk .qm / ! V.qm / as k ! 1 for all m 2 N. We have
Vk .pm / Vk .t/ Vk .qm /;
375
and hence
V.pm / D lim Vk .pm / lim sup Vk .t/ lim inf Vk .t/ lim Vk .qm / D V.qm /:
k!1
k!1
k!1
k!1
We pass with m to infinity and use the fact that V, by definition, is continuous.
We get
V.t/ lim sup Vk .t/ lim inf Vk .t/ V.t/;
k!1
k!1
t1
Z
.k .r/; uk .r//L2 .C / dr
Z
!
t
t1
.f .r/; uk .r// dr
t1
t1
which gives us the convergence jun .t/j ! ju.t/j, and the proof is complete.
t
u
Lemma 16.6. If for every integer k, uk solves Problem 16.1 with the initial
condition u0k taken at t0 , and u0k ! u0 strongly in H then for any t > t0 , for a
subsequence, uk .t/ ! u.t/ weakly in H, where u is a solution of Problem 16.1 with
the initial condition u0 taken at t0 . In consequence, the m-process U on H satisfies
condition (NW).
Proof. The proof is standard since the a priori estimates of Lemma 16.3 provide
enough convergence to pass to the limit. Indeed, the sequence uk is bounded in
L2 .t0 ; tI V/ with u0k bounded in L2 .t0 ; tI V 0 /. Hence, for a subsequence, uk ! u
weakly in L2 .t0 ; tI V/ with u0k ! u0 weakly in L2 .t0 ; tI V 0 /. In consequence, for all
s 2 0; t, uk .s/ ! u.s/ weakly in H, which means that u.t0 / D u0 and uk .t/ ! u.t/
weakly in H. It also follows that uk ! u strongly in L2 .t0 ; tI L2 .C // and in
L2 .C .t0 ; t//. We must show that u solves Problem 16.1 on .t0 ; t/. We only discuss
passing to the limit in the multivalued term since for other terms it is standard. Let
2
k 2 L2 .t0 ; tI L2 .C // be such that k .s/ 2 [email protected];u
a.e. s 2 .t0 ; t/ and (16.11) holds.
k .s//
From the growth condition .j3/ it follows that k is bounded in L2 .t0 ; tI L2 .C //
and thus, for a subsequence, we have k ! weakly in L2 .t0 ; tI L2 .C // and
weakly in L2 .C .t0 ; t//. Using assertion .H2/ in Theorem 3.24 it follows that
for a.e. .x; s/ 2 C .t0 ; t/ .x; s/ 2 @j.x; s; u .x; s//, which, in turn, implies that
2
.s/ 2 [email protected];u
for a.e. s 2 .t0 ; t/, and the proof is complete.
t
u
.s//
From Lemmas 16.416.6 it follows that all assumptions of Corollary 16.3 hold
and hence we have shown the following Theorem.
Theorem 16.4. The m-process U on H associated with Problem 16.1 has a D pullback attractor. This attractor is moreover invariant and it belongs to D .
376
In the above theorem the attractor invariance and the fact that it belongs to the
universe D follow from Corollary 16.1 as the m-process is strict and the attraction
universe D satisfies .HD1/.
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References
Index
Symbols
!-limit set, 152
pullback, 262
-cocycle, 260
continuous, 261
pullback D-asymptotically compact, 261
A
attraction universe, 261, 266, 277, 360
inclusion-closed, 266, 364
attractor
(global) pullback D-, 261, 278
for m-process, 362
minimal, 262
exponential, 209
global, 151, 208
weak, 334, 339
trajectory, 330
B
Banach contraction principle, 42
Banach generalized limit, 170
Bochner integral, 62
boundary condition
Fourier, 112
Tresca, 112
Boussinesq equations, 24
C
Cauchy
equation of motion, 17
principle, 16
coercive bilinear form, 40
complex amplitude, 56
condition (NW), 366
contraction, 42
coordinate
material, 12
spatial, 12
Couette flow, 36
D
derivative
distributional, 48
time, 63
generalized, 46
material, 13
determining modes, 252
determining nodes, 256, 257
differential inclusion, 234
dilation group, 33
dimension
fractal, 183, 209
Hausdorff, 193
Dirac delta, 47
directional derivative
generalized Clarke, 71
dissipation, function, 23
distribution, 47
regular, 47
Du Bois-Reymond, lemma, 45
E
Ehrling lemma, 65
energy
dissipation rate, 196
387
388
energy transfer
direct, 165
inverse, 166
energy, specific internal, 19
enstrophy, 165
entropy, balance of, 27
equation
energy, 178, 288
enstrophy, 156
Liouville, 176, 286
stationary, 176
Euler formula, 14
evolutionary system, 338
F
field equations, 22
flow
large scale component, 164
small scale component, 164
fluid
incompressible, 14
Newtonian, 21
non-Newtonian, 21
perfect, 18
polar, 21
Stokesian, 21
force
body, 16
contact, 16
Fourier coefficient, 56
Fourier law, 20
friction
coefficient, 112
multifunction, 96, 341
function
Bochner integrable, 62
locally integrable, 45
weakly continuous, 66
function space
Ck ./, 45
Ck ./, 45
C1 ./, 45
C01 ./, 45
Cp1 .Q/, 54
Hps .Q/, 54
H m ./, 47
1
Lloc
./, 45
L1 ./, 45
Lp ./, 44
p
Lloc ./, 45
W m;q ./, 47
W m;p ./, 46
m;p
W0 ./, 46
Index
P ps .Q/, 56
H
LP 2 .Q/, 59
D 0 ./, 47
D./, 47
G
Galerkin method, 40
Galilean invariance, 31
Grashof number, 159, 252
gravity acceleration, 24
H
Hausdorff semi-distance, 151, 261, 359
weak, 338
heat flux, 19
I
inequality
Agmon, 157
first energy, 145
Gronwall, 67
generalized, 70
translated, 69
uniform, 68
Hardy, 53
Korn, 117
Ladyzhenskaya, 51, 218, 343
LiebThirring, 200
Poincar, 50, 56, 120
second energy, 155
K
kinematic viscosity coefficient, 23
Kuratowski measure of noncompactness, 360
KuratowskiPainlev upper limit, 74
L
l-trajectory, 209
law
of thermodynamics
first, 19
second, 27
LaxMilgram, lemma, 40
local variable, 25
M
measure
invariant, 169
regular, 175
Index
N
NavierStokes equations, 24
nodal point, 256
O
operator
completely continuous, 42
P
point
nonwandering, 172
wandering, 173
Poiseuille flow, 35
pressure, 18
principle
Banach contraction, 42
dimensional homogenity, 33
of conservation of linear momentum, 16
of conservation of mass, 15
process
evolutionary, 266, 297
-continuous, 291
pullback D-asymptotically compact,
266
multivalued (m-process), 360
closed, 362
pullback !-D-limit compact, 360
pullback D-asymptotically compact,
360
strict, 360
R
Reynolds
equation, 141
weak form, 137
number, 29
rotation symmetry, 31
S
scaling, 31
semiflow
uniformly quasidifferentiable, 186
semigroup, 151
asymptotically compact, 154
continuous, 151
uniformly compact, 152
set
absorbing, 152
for shift semigroup, 330
attracting
for shift semigroup, 330
weakly, 338
389
invariant, 151, 339
non-autonomous, 261, 266, 360
pullback D-absorbing, 267, 362
parameterized, 261
pullback D-absorbing, 261
pullback D-attracting, 261
prevalent, 185
similarity
dynamical, 29
variable, 33
smoothing estimate, 191
Sobolev space, 46
solution
approximate, 41, 144
invariant, 32
LerayHopf, 347, 353
self-similar, 31
statistical, 289
stationary, 178, 290
squeezing property, 192
Stokes
operator, 84, 86
problem, 84
stress
hydrostatic, 18
normal, 16
subdifferential
generalized Clarke, 71
support
of function, 45
of measure, 172
symmetry group, 31
T
tensor
deformation, 20
stress, 17
stress, viscous, 18
theorem
AubinLions, 66
Brouwer, 42
HlderMa, 185
HahnBanach, 175
KakutaniFanGlicksberg, 44
Lebourg
mean value, 72
LeraySchauder, 43
of stress means, 19
Rellich, 49
RieszFrchet, 41
RieszKakutani, 175
Schauder, 42
Tietze, 176
transport, 13
390
theory
false, 37
incomplete, 37
overdetermined, 37
well-set, 36
thermal
conductivity, 20
diffusion coefficient, 24
expansion coefficient, 24
tracking property, 339
Tresca condition, 211
generalized, 233, 367
Index
V
variable
hydromechanical, 12
state, 26
variational inequality, 215
velocity, 12
vorticity, 25
W
wave number, 56