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Large-scale regularity for the stationary Navier-Stokes equations over non-Lipschitz boundaries

Mitsuo Higaki, Christophe Prange, Jinping Zhuge

Abstract

In this paper we address the large-scale regularity theory for the stationary Navier-Stokes equations in highly oscillating bumpy John domains. These domains are very rough, possibly with fractals or cusps, at the microscopic scale, but are amenable to the mathematical analysis of the Navier-Stokes equations. We prove: (i) a large-scale Calderón-Zygmund estimate, (ii) a large-scale Lipschitz estimate, (iii) large-scale higher-order regularity estimates, namely, $C^{1,γ}$ and $C^{2,γ}$ estimates. These nice regularity results are inherited only at mesoscopic scales, and clearly fail in general at the microscopic scales. We emphasize that the large-scale $C^{1,γ}$ regularity is obtained by using first-order boundary layers constructed via a new argument. The large-scale $C^{2,γ}$ regularity relies on the construction of second-order boundary layers, which allows for certain boundary data with linear growth at spatial infinity. To the best of our knowledge, our work is the first to carry out such an analysis. In the wake of many works in quantitative homogenization, our results strongly advocate in favor of considering the boundary regularity of the solutions to fluid equations as a multiscale problem, with improved regularity at or above a certain scale.

Large-scale regularity for the stationary Navier-Stokes equations over non-Lipschitz boundaries

Abstract

In this paper we address the large-scale regularity theory for the stationary Navier-Stokes equations in highly oscillating bumpy John domains. These domains are very rough, possibly with fractals or cusps, at the microscopic scale, but are amenable to the mathematical analysis of the Navier-Stokes equations. We prove: (i) a large-scale Calderón-Zygmund estimate, (ii) a large-scale Lipschitz estimate, (iii) large-scale higher-order regularity estimates, namely, and estimates. These nice regularity results are inherited only at mesoscopic scales, and clearly fail in general at the microscopic scales. We emphasize that the large-scale regularity is obtained by using first-order boundary layers constructed via a new argument. The large-scale regularity relies on the construction of second-order boundary layers, which allows for certain boundary data with linear growth at spatial infinity. To the best of our knowledge, our work is the first to carry out such an analysis. In the wake of many works in quantitative homogenization, our results strongly advocate in favor of considering the boundary regularity of the solutions to fluid equations as a multiscale problem, with improved regularity at or above a certain scale.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 28 sections, 41 theorems, 352 equations.

Key Result

Theorem A

For all $\varepsilon\in(0,\frac{1}{2})$, $L\in (0,\infty)$, $M\in(0,\infty)$ and $\delta\in(0,1)$, the following statement holds. Let $\Omega$ be a bumpy John domain with constant $L$ according to Definition def.John2 below. If $(u^\varepsilon, p^\varepsilon) \in H^1(B^\varepsilon_{1,+})^3 \times L^ (The precise definition of the bumpy cube $B^\varepsilon_{r,+} = Q_r(0) \cap \Omega^\varepsilon$ ca

Theorems & Definitions (73)

  • Theorem A: Large-scale Lipschitz regularity
  • Theorem B: Large-scale $C^{1,\gamma}$ regularity
  • Theorem C: Large-scale $C^{2,\gamma}$ regularity
  • Definition 1.1
  • Definition 1.2
  • Definition 1.3
  • Lemma 2.1
  • Lemma 2.2
  • proof
  • Remark 2.3: Covering argument
  • ...and 63 more