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Displaying items by tag: Primitive equations

 

Changhui Tan, Zhuan Ye


Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the two-dimensional incompressible primitive equations with fractional horizontal dissipation. Specifically, we establish global well-posedness of strong solutions for arbitrarily large initial data when the dissipation exponent satisfies \(\alpha\geq\alpha_{0}\approx1.1108\). In addition, we prove global well-posedness of strong solutions for small initial data when \(\alpha \in [1, \alpha_0)\). Notably, the smallness assumption is imposed only on the \(L^\infty\) norm of the initial vorticity.


 This work is supported by NSF grants DMS #2238219
Published in Research

 

Elie Abdo, Quyuan Lin, and Changhui Tan


Abstract

The primitive equations (PE) are a fundamental model in geophysical fluid dynamics. While the viscous PE are globally well-posed, their inviscid counterparts are known to be ill-posed.

In this paper, we study the two-dimensional incompressible PE with fractional horizontal dissipation. We identify a sharp transition between local well-posedness and ill-posedness at the critical dissipation exponent \(\alpha=1\). In the critical regime, this dichotomy exhibits a new phenomenon: the transition depends delicately on the balance between the size of the initial data and the viscosity coefficient. Our results precisely quantify the horizontal dissipation required to transition from inviscid instability to viscous regularity. We also establish a global well-posedness theory to the fractional PE, with sufficient dissipation \(\alpha\geq\frac65\).


 This work is supported by NSF grants DMS #2108264 and DMS #2238219
Published in Research