Asymptotic profiles and large-time behavior for 3D micropolar fluid equations with possibly vanishing spin viscosity
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 16:06 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Restricted Leray solutions to 3D micropolar equations with possibly vanishing spin viscosity decay in L2 like their linear counterparts up to the rate O(t^{-5/2}).
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We prove that restricted Leray solutions behave asymptotically in L2 like their linear counterpart, up to the critical algebraic decay rate O(t^{-5/2}) for the energy. Applying a remarkable linear enstrophy identity, we show that the microrotation field exhibits faster decay in L2 than the velocity field, allowing us to impose our hypothesis on the velocity field only and not on the angular velocity.
What carries the argument
Restricted Leray solutions (weak finite-energy solutions obeying a strong energy inequality) together with the explicit second-order L2 asymptotic profile of the linear micropolar system.
If this is right
- The L2 norm of the difference between the nonlinear solution and the linear profile vanishes at a rate strictly faster than t to the power -5/2.
- The total kinetic energy of the flow decays at least as fast as O(t^{-5/2}).
- The microrotation field decays strictly faster in L2 than the velocity field.
- Only assumptions on the initial velocity are required; no separate decay hypotheses on the initial microrotation are needed.
- The nonlinear terms become negligible compared with the linear evolution after a sufficiently large time.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same comparison strategy may extend to other fluid models that include an additional rotational degree of freedom.
- If a strong energy inequality can be established for all weak solutions, the restriction to the Leray subclass would become unnecessary.
- The faster decay of the microrotation could simplify long-time numerical simulations by allowing coarser resolution for the angular velocity.
- The vanishing-spin-viscosity limit may correspond to a physically relevant regime for certain suspensions or complex fluids.
Load-bearing premise
Restricted Leray solutions exist and obey a strong energy inequality that controls the nonlinear interaction terms for large times.
What would settle it
A concrete weak finite-energy solution that violates the strong energy inequality, or a direct computation showing that the L2 difference between a nonlinear restricted Leray solution and the linear profile fails to vanish faster than the energy itself.
read the original abstract
We consider 3D micropolar flows with possible vanishing spin viscosity and investigate the decay of the energy for large times. We compute first the exact $L^2$-asymptotic profile, as $t\to+\infty$, for solutions to the linear 3D micropolar equations, up to the second order. For the nonlinear micropolar system, we first establish the existence of restricted Leray solutions. This new notion of solutions is required because it is not known whether the weak finite energy solutions verify a strong energy inequality. Next, we study the large-time behavior of restricted Leray solutions, and prove that they behave asymptotically in $L^2$ like their linear counterpart, up to the critical algebraic decay rate $O(t^{-5/2})$ for the energy. Applying a remarkable linear enstrophy identity, we show that the microrotation field exhibits faster decay in $L^2$ than the velocity field, allowing us to impose our hypothesis on the velocity field only and not on the angular velocity.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper computes the exact L²-asymptotic profile (up to second order) for the linear 3D micropolar equations. For the nonlinear system with possibly vanishing spin viscosity, it introduces the new class of restricted Leray solutions because it is unknown whether standard weak finite-energy solutions satisfy a strong energy inequality. The authors prove existence of these restricted solutions and show that they behave asymptotically in L² like the linear profile up to the critical decay rate O(t^{-5/2}) for the energy. A linear enstrophy identity is applied to obtain faster L² decay for the microrotation field, allowing hypotheses to be imposed only on the velocity.
Significance. If the claims hold, the results advance the large-time analysis of micropolar fluids by handling vanishing spin viscosity and providing explicit asymptotic profiles. The introduction of restricted Leray solutions is a pragmatic device to circumvent a known technical gap in weak-solution theory. The linear enstrophy identity, which decouples the decay rates of velocity and angular velocity, is a clear technical strength that may apply to related systems.
major comments (3)
- [Section 2] Definition of restricted Leray solutions (Section 2): the class is introduced precisely because the strong energy inequality is unavailable for ordinary weak solutions, yet the subsequent Duhamel representation and limit passage in the asymptotic comparison (used to reach O(t^{-5/2})) require this inequality or equivalent integrability control on the nonlinear term. The manuscript does not explicitly verify that the restriction preserves the necessary estimates.
- [Section 4] Theorem on L² asymptotic behavior (Section 4): the central claim that restricted Leray solutions match the linear profile up to O(t^{-5/2}) is load-bearing. The proof must detail how the nonlinear remainder is shown to be o(t^{-5/2}) in L²; the critical rate makes the integrability borderline, and it is unclear whether the restricted class supplies the required time-integrability without additional a-priori bounds.
- [Section 3] Application of the linear enstrophy identity (Section 3 or 4): while the identity yields faster decay for the microrotation, the manuscript should clarify how the identity survives the nonlinear coupling when only the velocity is assumed to satisfy the restricted energy inequality; the interaction terms between velocity and angular velocity need explicit control to justify imposing hypotheses solely on the velocity field.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract introduces 'restricted Leray solutions' without a one-sentence characterization; a brief parenthetical description would improve accessibility.
- [Introduction] Notation for the spin-viscosity parameter and the microrotation field should be fixed at the first appearance in the introduction to avoid later ambiguity.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading of our manuscript and the constructive comments. We address each major point below and will incorporate clarifications and additional details in a revised version.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Section 2] Definition of restricted Leray solutions (Section 2): the class is introduced precisely because the strong energy inequality is unavailable for ordinary weak solutions, yet the subsequent Duhamel representation and limit passage in the asymptotic comparison (used to reach O(t^{-5/2})) require this inequality or equivalent integrability control on the nonlinear term. The manuscript does not explicitly verify that the restriction preserves the necessary estimates.
Authors: We agree that an explicit verification strengthens the presentation. The definition of restricted Leray solutions incorporates the strong energy inequality directly, which supplies the required integrability of the nonlinear term for the Duhamel formula and limit passage. In the revision we will add a short lemma or remark in Section 2 confirming that all estimates used in Sections 3 and 4 remain valid for this class. revision: yes
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Referee: [Section 4] Theorem on L² asymptotic behavior (Section 4): the central claim that restricted Leray solutions match the linear profile up to O(t^{-5/2}) is load-bearing. The proof must detail how the nonlinear remainder is shown to be o(t^{-5/2}) in L²; the critical rate makes the integrability borderline, and it is unclear whether the restricted class supplies the required time-integrability without additional a-priori bounds.
Authors: We will expand the proof in Section 4 to include a detailed estimate of the nonlinear remainder. Using the time-integrability of the nonlinear term furnished by the restricted energy inequality together with the decay properties of the linear semigroup, we show that this remainder is indeed o(t^{-5/2}) in L². The revision will make the borderline integrability argument fully explicit. revision: yes
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Referee: [Section 3] Application of the linear enstrophy identity (Section 3 or 4): while the identity yields faster decay for the microrotation, the manuscript should clarify how the identity survives the nonlinear coupling when only the velocity is assumed to satisfy the restricted energy inequality; the interaction terms between velocity and angular velocity need explicit control to justify imposing hypotheses solely on the velocity field.
Authors: The linear enstrophy identity is applied to the microrotation equation after treating the nonlinear coupling as a perturbation. We will add a clarifying paragraph (or short subsection) that controls the interaction terms via the restricted energy inequality on the velocity and the structure of the micropolar system; the resulting error terms decay fast enough to preserve the faster L² decay for the microrotation and to justify imposing assumptions only on the velocity. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; new solution class and linear asymptotics are independent of the target decay claim
full rationale
The paper introduces restricted Leray solutions precisely to bypass the unknown strong energy inequality for standard weak solutions, then proves their existence separately before deriving the L2-asymptotic profile via Duhamel and linear decay estimates. The linear profile computation is performed first on the linear system and does not depend on the nonlinear solution class. The microrotation decay follows from a linear enstrophy identity applied after the velocity hypothesis. No step reduces the main asymptotic result to a fitted parameter, self-definition, or load-bearing self-citation; the derivation remains self-contained once the restricted class is fixed.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Existence of restricted Leray solutions for the nonlinear micropolar system
invented entities (1)
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restricted Leray solutions
no independent evidence
Reference graph
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