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A rigorous but accessible introduction to the mathematical theory
of the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations, this book
provides self-contained proofs of some of the most significant
results in the area, many of which can only be found in research
papers. Highlights include the existence of global-in-time
Leray-Hopf weak solutions and the local existence of strong
solutions; the conditional local regularity results of Serrin and
others; and the partial regularity results of Caffarelli, Kohn, and
Nirenberg. Appendices provide background material and proofs of
some 'standard results' that are hard to find in the literature. A
substantial number of exercises are included, with full solutions
given at the end of the book. As the only introductory text on the
topic to treat all of the mainstream results in detail, this book
is an ideal text for a graduate course of one or two semesters. It
is also a useful resource for anyone working in mathematical fluid
dynamics.
The Euler and Navier-Stokes equations are the fundamental
mathematical models of fluid mechanics, and their study remains
central in the modern theory of partial differential equations.
This volume of articles, derived from the workshop 'PDEs in Fluid
Mechanics' held at the University of Warwick in 2016, serves to
consolidate, survey and further advance research in this area. It
contains reviews of recent progress and classical results, as well
as cutting-edge research articles. Topics include Onsager's
conjecture for energy conservation in the Euler equations,
weak-strong uniqueness in fluid models and several chapters address
the Navier-Stokes equations directly; in particular, a retelling of
Leray's formative 1934 paper in modern mathematical language. The
book also covers more general PDE methods with applications in
fluid mechanics and beyond. This collection will serve as a helpful
overview of current research for graduate students new to the area
and for more established researchers.
The rigorous mathematical theory of the Navier-Stokes and Euler
equations has been a focus of intense activity in recent years.
This volume, the product of a workshop in Venice in 2013,
consolidates, surveys and further advances the study of these
canonical equations. It consists of a number of reviews and a
selection of more traditional research articles on topics that
include classical solutions to the 2D Euler equation, modal
dependency for the 3D Navier-Stokes equation, zero viscosity
Boussinesq equations, global regularity and finite-time
singularities, well-posedness for the diffusive Burgers equations,
and probabilistic aspects of the Navier-Stokes equation. The result
is an accessible summary of a wide range of active research topics
written by leaders in their field, together with some exciting new
results. The book serves both as a helpful overview for graduate
students new to the area and as a useful resource for more
established researchers.
This accessible research monograph investigates how
'finite-dimensional' sets can be embedded into finite-dimensional
Euclidean spaces. The first part brings together a number of
abstract embedding results, and provides a unified treatment of
four definitions of dimension that arise in disparate fields:
Lebesgue covering dimension (from classical 'dimension theory'),
Hausdorff dimension (from geometric measure theory), upper
box-counting dimension (from dynamical systems), and Assouad
dimension (from the theory of metric spaces). These abstract
embedding results are applied in the second part of the book to the
finite-dimensional global attractors that arise in certain
infinite-dimensional dynamical systems, deducing practical
consequences from the existence of such attractors: a version of
the Takens time-delay embedding theorem valid in spatially extended
systems, and a result on parametrisation by point values. This book
will appeal to all researchers with an interest in dimension
theory, particularly those working in dynamical systems.
This book develops the theory of global attractors for a class of parabolic PDEs that includes reaction-diffusion equations and the Navier-Stokes equations, two examples that are treated in detail. A lengthy chapter on Sobolev spaces provides the framework that allows a rigorous treatment of existence and uniqueness of solutions for both linear time-independent problems (Poisson's equation) and the nonlinear evolution equations which generate the infinite-dimensional dynamical systemss of the title. Attention then switches to the global attractor, a finite-dimensional subset of the infinite-dimensional phase space which determines the asymptotic dynamics. In particular, the concluding chapters investigate in what sense the dynamics restricted to the attractor are themselves "finite-dimensional." The book is intended as a didactic text for first year graduates, and assumes only a basic knowledge of Banach and Hilbert spaces, and a working understanding of the Lebesgue integral.
This book develops the theory of global attractors for a class of parabolic PDEs that includes reaction-diffusion equations and the Navier-Stokes equations, two examples that are treated in detail. A lengthy chapter on Sobolev spaces provides the framework that allows a rigorous treatment of existence and uniqueness of solutions for both linear time-independent problems (Poisson's equation) and the nonlinear evolution equations which generate the infinite-dimensional dynamical systemss of the title. Attention then switches to the global attractor, a finite-dimensional subset of the infinite-dimensional phase space which determines the asymptotic dynamics. In particular, the concluding chapters investigate in what sense the dynamics restricted to the attractor are themselves "finite-dimensional." The book is intended as a didactic text for first year graduates, and assumes only a basic knowledge of Banach and Hilbert spaces, and a working understanding of the Lebesgue integral.
This accessible text covers key results in functional analysis that
are essential for further study in the calculus of variations,
analysis, dynamical systems, and the theory of partial differential
equations. The treatment of Hilbert spaces covers the topics
required to prove the Hilbert-Schmidt theorem, including
orthonormal bases, the Riesz representation theorem, and the basics
of spectral theory. The material on Banach spaces and their duals
includes the Hahn-Banach theorem, the Krein-Milman theorem, and
results based on the Baire category theorem, before culminating in
a proof of sequential weak compactness in reflexive spaces.
Arguments are presented in detail, and more than 200 fully-worked
exercises are included to provide practice applying techniques and
ideas beyond the major theorems. Familiarity with the basic theory
of vector spaces and point-set topology is assumed, but knowledge
of measure theory is not required, making this book ideal for upper
undergraduate-level and beginning graduate-level courses.
This accessible text covers key results in functional analysis that
are essential for further study in the calculus of variations,
analysis, dynamical systems, and the theory of partial differential
equations. The treatment of Hilbert spaces covers the topics
required to prove the Hilbert-Schmidt theorem, including
orthonormal bases, the Riesz representation theorem, and the basics
of spectral theory. The material on Banach spaces and their duals
includes the Hahn-Banach theorem, the Krein-Milman theorem, and
results based on the Baire category theorem, before culminating in
a proof of sequential weak compactness in reflexive spaces.
Arguments are presented in detail, and more than 200 fully-worked
exercises are included to provide practice applying techniques and
ideas beyond the major theorems. Familiarity with the basic theory
of vector spaces and point-set topology is assumed, but knowledge
of measure theory is not required, making this book ideal for upper
undergraduate-level and beginning graduate-level courses.
The rigorous mathematical theory of the equations of fluid dynamics
has been a focus of intense activity in recent years. This volume
is the product of a workshop held at the University of Warwick to
consolidate, survey and further advance the subject. The Navier
Stokes equations feature prominently: the reader will find new
results concerning feedback stabilisation, stretching and folding,
and decay in norm of solutions to these fundamental equations of
fluid motion. Other topics covered include new models for turbulent
energy cascade, existence and uniqueness results for complex fluids
and certain interesting solutions of the SQG equation. The result
is an accessible collection of survey articles and more traditional
research papers that will serve both as a helpful overview for
graduate students new to the area and as a useful resource for more
established researchers.
Recent years have seen considerable research activity at the
interface of mathematics and fluid mechanics, particularly partial
differential equations. The 2007 workshop at the University of
Warwick was organized to consolidate, survey and further advance
the subject. This volume is an outgrowth of that workshop. It
consists of a number of reviews and a selection of more traditional
research articles. The result is an accessible summary of a wide
range of active research topics written by leaders in their field,
together with some exciting new results. The book serves as both a
helpful overview for graduate students new to the area and a useful
resource for more established researchers.
This introduction to ordinary differential and difference equations is suited not only for mathematicians but for scientists and engineers as well. Exact solutions methods and qualitative approaches are covered, and many illustrative examples are included. Matlab is used to generate graphical representations of solutions. Numerous exercises are featured and proved solutions are available for teachers.
This book collects together a unique set of articles dedicated to
several fundamental aspects of the Navier-Stokes equations. As is
well known, understanding the mathematical properties of these
equations, along with their physical interpretation, constitutes
one of the most challenging questions of applied mathematics.
Indeed, the Navier-Stokes equations feature among the Clay
Mathematics Institute's seven Millennium Prize Problems (existence
of global in time, regular solutions corresponding to initial data
of unrestricted magnitude). The text comprises three extensive
contributions covering the following topics: (1) Operator-Valued H
-calculus, R-boundedness, Fourier multipliers and maximal
Lp-regularity theory for a large, abstract class of quasi-linear
evolution problems with applications to Navier-Stokes equations and
other fluid model equations; (2) Classical existence, uniqueness
and regularity theorems of solutions to the Navier-Stokes
initial-value problem, along with space-time partial regularity and
investigation of the smoothness of the Lagrangean flow map; and (3)
A complete mathematical theory of R-boundedness and maximal
regularity with applications to free boundary problems for the
Navier-Stokes equations with and without surface tension. Offering
a general mathematical framework that could be used to study fluid
problems and, more generally, a wide class of abstract evolution
equations, this volume is aimed at graduate students and
researchers who want to become acquainted with fundamental problems
related to the Navier-Stokes equations.
Innovation in medical technology generates a remarkable supply of
new drugs, devices, and diagnostics that improve health, reduce
risks, and extend life. But these technologies are too often used
on the wrong patient, in the wrong setting, or at an unaffordable
price. The only way to moderate the growth in health care costs
without undermining the dynamic of medical innovation is to improve
the process of assessing, pricing, prescribing, and using new
technologies. Purchasing Medical Innovation analyzes the
contemporary revolution in the purchasing of health care
technology, with a focus on the roles of the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), Medicare and private health insurers,
physicians and hospitals, and consumers themselves. The FDA is more
thoroughly assessing product performance under real-world
conditions as well as in laboratory settings, accelerating the path
to market for breakthroughs while imposing use controls on risky
products. Insurers are improving their criteria for coverage and
designing payment methods that reward efficiency in the selection
of new treatments. Hospitals are aligning adoption of complex
supplies and equipment more closely with physicians' preferences
for the best treatment for their patients. Consumers are becoming
more engaged and financially accountable for their health care
choices. This book describes both the strengths and deficiencies of
the current system of purchasing and highlights opportunities for
buyers, sellers, and users to help improve the value of medical
technology: better outcomes at lower cost.
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