Energy decay for the Cauchy problem of the linear wave equation of variable coefficients with dissipation

2009 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pengfei Yao
Author(s):  
Shi-Zhuo Looi ◽  
Mihai Tohaneanu

Abstract We prove that solutions to the quintic semilinear wave equation with variable coefficients in ${{\mathbb {R}}}^{1+3}$ scatter to a solution to the corresponding linear wave equation. The coefficients are small and decay as $|x|\to \infty$ , but are allowed to be time dependent. The proof uses local energy decay estimates to establish the decay of the $L^{6}$ norm of the solution as $t\to \infty$ .


2011 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 164-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daewook Kim ◽  
Yong Han Kang ◽  
Mi Jin Lee ◽  
Il Hyo Jung

2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (04) ◽  
pp. 833-860
Author(s):  
Helge Kristian Jenssen ◽  
Charis Tsikkou

We consider the strategy of realizing the solution of a Cauchy problem (CP) with radial data as a limit of radial solutions to initial-boundary value problems posed on the exterior of vanishing balls centered at the origin. The goal is to gauge the effectiveness of this approach in a simple, concrete setting: the three-dimensional (3d), linear wave equation [Formula: see text] with radial Cauchy data [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text]. We are primarily interested in this as a model situation for other, possibly nonlinear, equations where neither formulae nor abstract existence results are available for the radial symmetric CP. In treating the 3d wave equation, we therefore insist on robust arguments based on energy methods and strong convergence. (In particular, this work does not address what can be established via solution formulae.) Our findings for the 3d wave equation show that while one can obtain existence of radial Cauchy solutions via exterior solutions, one should not expect such results to be optimal. The standard existence result for the linear wave equation guarantees a unique solution in [Formula: see text] whenever [Formula: see text]. However, within the constrained framework outlined above, we obtain strictly lower regularity for solutions obtained as limits of exterior solutions. We also show that external Neumann solutions yield better regularity than external Dirichlet solutions. Specifically, for Cauchy data in [Formula: see text], we obtain [Formula: see text]-solutions via exterior Neumann solutions, and only [Formula: see text]-solutions via exterior Dirichlet solutions.


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