DMS-EPSRC: Stability Analysis for Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations across Multiscale Applications

Lead Research Organisation: University of Oxford
Department Name: Mathematical Institute

Abstract

Nonlinear partial differential equations (NPDEs) are at the heart of many scientific advances, with both length scales ranging from sub-atomic to astronomical and timescales ranging from picoseconds to millennia. Stability analysis is crucial in all aspects of NPDEs and their applications in Science and Engineering, but has grand challenges.

For instance, when a planar shock hits a wedge head on, a self-similar reflected shock moves outward as the original shock moves forward in time. The complexity of shock reflection-diffraction configurations was reported by Ernst Mach in 1878, and later experimental, computational, and asymptotic analysis has shown that various patterns of reflected-diffracted shocks may occur. Most fundamental issues for shock reflection-diffraction have not been understood. The global existence and stability of shock reflection-diffraction solutions in the framework of the compressible Euler system and the potential flow equation, widely used in Aerodynamics, will be a definite mathematical answer.

Another example arises in the analysis of mean field limits, a powerful tool in applied analysis introduced to bridge microscopic and macroscopic descriptions of many body systems. They typically involve a huge number of individuals (particles), such as gas molecules in the upper atmosphere, from which we want to extract macroscopic information. Multi-agent systems have become more popular than ever. In addition to their new classical applications in Physics, they are widely used in Biology, Economy, Finance, and even Social Sciences. One key question is how this complexity is reduced by quantifying the stability of the mean field limit and/or their hydrodynamic approximations.

By forming a distinctive joint force of the UK/US expertise, the proposed research is to tackle the most difficult and longstanding stability problems for NPDEs across the scales, including asymptotic, quantifying, and structural stability problems in hyperbolic systems of conservation laws, kinetic equations, and related multiscale applications in transonic/viscous-inviscid/fluid-particle models. Through this rare combination of skills and methodology across the Atlantic, the project focuses on four interrelated objectives, each connected either with challenging open problems or with newly emerging fundamental problems involving stability/instability:

Objective 1. Stability analysis of shock wave patterns of reflections/diffraction with focus on the shock reflection-diffraction problem in gas dynamics, one of the most fundamental multi-dimensional (M-D) shock wave problems;

Objective 2. Stability analysis of vortex sheets, contact discontinuities, and other characteristic discontinuities for M-D hyperbolic systems of conservation laws, especially including the equations of M-D nonisentropic thermoelasticity in the Eulerian coordinates, governing the evolution of thermoelastic nonconductors of heat;

Objective 3. Stability analysis of particle to continuum limits including the quantifying asymptotic/mean-field/large-time limits for pairwise interactions and particle limits for general interactions among multi-agent systems;

Objective 4. Stability analysis of asymptotic limits with emphasis on the vanishing viscosity limit of solutions from M-D compressible viscous to inviscid flows with large initial data.

These objectives are demanding, since the problems involved are of mixed-type and multiscale, as well as M-D, nonlocal, and less regular, making the mathematical analysis a formidable task. While many of the problems in the project have been known for some time, it is only recently that their solutions seem to have come within reach; in fact, part of the project would have been inconceivable prior to 2010. The simultaneous study of problems associated with the four objectives above will lead to a more systematic stability analysis for NPDEs across multiscale applications.

Publications

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Carrillo J (2024) Dissipative Measure-Valued Solutions to the Euler-Poisson Equation in SIAM Journal on Mathematical Analysis

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Carrillo J (2022) Controlling Swarms toward Flocks and Mills in SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization

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Carrillo J (2022) From radial symmetry to fractal behavior of aggregation equilibria for repulsive-attractive potentials in Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations

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Carrillo J (2023) An invariance principle for gradient flows in the space of probability measures in Journal of Differential Equations

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Carrillo J (2022) Consensus-based sampling in Studies in Applied Mathematics

 
Description PDE Workshop in Stability Analysis for Nonlinear PDEs, Monday 15th - Friday 19th August 2022 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact We brought together leading experts in the stability analysis of nonlinear partial differential equations across multi-scale applications. Some of the topics to be addressed include:
Stability analysis of shock wave patterns of reflections/diffraction.
Stability analysis of vortex sheets, contact discontinuities, and other characteristic discontinuities for multidimensional hyperbolic systems of conservation laws.
Stability analysis of particle to continuum limits including the quantifying asymptotic/mean-field/large-time limits for pairwise interactions and particle limits for general interactions among multi-agent systems
Stability analysis of asymptotic limits with emphasis on the vanishing viscosity limit of solutions from multidimensional compressible viscous to inviscid flows with large initial data.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.maths.ox.ac.uk/node/60407