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arxiv: 1907.04682 · v1 · pith:U333RE2Jnew · submitted 2019-07-09 · 🧮 math.AP

Asymptotic profile for diffusion wave terms of the compressible Navier-Stokes-Korteweg system

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 00:06 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP
keywords compressible Navier-Stokes-Korteweg systemdiffusion wavesHardy spaceasymptotic profilesMorawetz energy estimateFefferman-Stein inequalityR^2
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The pith

For initial data in the Hardy space the diffusion wave part of potential momentum in the 2D compressible Navier-Stokes-Korteweg system decays slower in space-time L2 than the density component.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that asymptotic behaviors in space-time L2 of the diffusion wave parts differ between density and the potential flow part of the momentum when initial conditions lie in the Hardy space. The potential flow part of the momentum exhibits slower decay than the Stokes flow part even under L2 measurement on space. The argument relies on a modified Morawetz energy estimate together with the Fefferman-Stein inequality to separate the components. A sympathetic reader would care because the distinction refines the long-time description of solutions to a capillarity-augmented fluid model on the plane.

Core claim

For some initial conditions given by the Hardy space, asymptotic behaviors in space-time L2 of the diffusion wave parts are essentially different between density and the potential flow part of the momentum, with the decay of the potential flow part slower than that of the Stokes flow part of the momentum.

What carries the argument

Modified Morawetz energy estimate combined with the Fefferman-Stein inequality on the duality between the Hardy space and functions of bounded mean oscillation, used to isolate and compare the density and potential-momentum diffusion-wave components.

If this is right

  • The density diffusion wave obeys the decay rates previously established for the compressible Navier-Stokes system.
  • The potential part of the momentum diffusion wave obeys a slower decay rate than the Stokes part even when norms are taken only in L2.
  • The distinction persists under the modified energy estimates that incorporate the Korteweg capillarity term.
  • The result applies specifically to the two-dimensional whole-space setting.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Numerical simulations initialized with Hardy-space data could directly measure whether the predicted difference in decay rates appears at large times.
  • The component-wise distinction may affect the design of artificial boundary conditions or absorbing layers used in long-time fluid computations.
  • Extension of the same separation technique to three dimensions or to exterior domains would test how dimension or boundary geometry alters the relative decay rates.

Load-bearing premise

The initial data must belong to the Hardy space so that the modified Morawetz estimate and Fefferman-Stein inequality can be applied to separate the density and potential momentum components.

What would settle it

An explicit initial datum in the Hardy space for which the space-time L2 decay rate of the density diffusion wave equals that of the potential-momentum diffusion wave would falsify the claimed distinction.

read the original abstract

Asymptotic profile for diffusion wave terms of solutions to the compressible Navier-Stokes-Korteweg system is studied on $R^2$. The diffusion wave with time decay estimate is studied by Hoff and Zumbrun (1995, 1997), Kobayashi and Shibata (2002) and Kobayashi and Tsuda (2018) for the compressible Navier-Stokes system and the compressible Navier-Stokes-Korteweg system. Our main assertion in this paper is that, for some initial conditions given by the Hardy space, asymptotic behaviors in space-time $L^2$ of the diffusion wave parts are essentially different between density and the potential flow part of the momentum. Even though measuring by $L^2$ on space, a decay of the potential flow part is slower than that of the Stokes flow part of the momentum. The proof is based on a modified version of Morawetz's energy estimate, and the Fefferman-Stein inequality on the duality between the Hardy space and functions of bounded mean oscillation.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper studies asymptotic profiles of diffusion wave terms for the compressible Navier-Stokes-Korteweg system on R^2. It claims that, for initial data in the Hardy space, the space-time L^2 behaviors of these terms differ between the density and the potential-flow part of the momentum, with the potential-flow component exhibiting slower decay than the Stokes-flow part of the momentum. The argument relies on a modified Morawetz energy estimate combined with the Fefferman-Stein inequality to exploit the H^1-BMO duality.

Significance. If the estimates hold, the result would sharpen the known diffusion-wave asymptotics for the NSK system relative to the NS system by isolating a Korteweg-induced distinction between density and momentum components. The use of Hardy-space data to obtain the component-wise separation via duality is a methodological strength that could be of interest for related hyperbolic-parabolic systems.

major comments (2)
  1. [§4] §4 (modified Morawetz estimate, around Eq. (4.3)–(4.7)): the absorption of the Korteweg capillary term into the energy identity is stated without an explicit bound showing that the term does not erase the distinction between the density and potential-momentum components; this step is load-bearing for the claimed difference in L^2 decay rates.
  2. [Theorem 1.2] Theorem 1.2 (main asymptotic statement): the asserted slower decay for the potential-flow part is quantified only up to the Fefferman-Stein constant; no explicit comparison of the resulting space-time L^2 exponents with those of the density or the Stokes part is supplied, making it impossible to verify that the difference survives the Korteweg perturbation.
minor comments (2)
  1. [§2] Notation for the potential-flow projection of the momentum is introduced in §2 but used inconsistently in the energy estimates of §4; a single symbol throughout would improve readability.
  2. The reference list omits the 2018 Kobayashi-Tsuda paper cited in the abstract; adding the full bibliographic entry is needed for completeness.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments. We address each major comment below and indicate the revisions that will be made.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§4] §4 (modified Morawetz estimate, around Eq. (4.3)–(4.7)): the absorption of the Korteweg capillary term into the energy identity is stated without an explicit bound showing that the term does not erase the distinction between the density and potential-momentum components; this step is load-bearing for the claimed difference in L^2 decay rates.

    Authors: We agree that an explicit bound is required to confirm the Korteweg term does not erase the component distinction. In the revision we will insert a dedicated estimate (new Lemma in §4) that bounds the capillary contribution via the Hardy-space norm of the initial data and the structure of the modified Morawetz identity; the bound is absorbed without changing the leading space-time L^2 terms that differentiate density from potential momentum. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Theorem 1.2] Theorem 1.2 (main asymptotic statement): the asserted slower decay for the potential-flow part is quantified only up to the Fefferman-Stein constant; no explicit comparison of the resulting space-time L^2 exponents with those of the density or the Stokes part is supplied, making it impossible to verify that the difference survives the Korteweg perturbation.

    Authors: The Fefferman-Stein constant is independent of (t,x) and therefore does not affect the decay exponents; the slower decay of the potential-flow part follows directly from the H^1-BMO duality applied to the linearised system. To make the comparison explicit we will add a short remark after Theorem 1.2 that records the precise space-time L^2 rates obtained for density, potential momentum and Stokes momentum, confirming that the Korteweg perturbation (controlled in §4) leaves the ordering of the exponents unchanged. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation uses external estimates

full rationale

The paper derives its central claim—that diffusion-wave components of density and potential momentum exhibit distinct space-time L^2 decay rates under the NSK system on R^2—via a modified Morawetz energy estimate together with the Fefferman-Stein inequality on Hardy-BMO duality. These tools are standard and independent of the paper's own fitted quantities or definitions. Prior citations (including Kobayashi-Tsuda 2018) supply background on diffusion waves but do not supply the load-bearing separation or decay exponents for the new result. No self-definitional steps, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, or uniqueness theorems imported from the same authors appear in the derivation chain. The Hardy-space assumption on initial data is used only to invoke the duality and does not reduce the target asymptotics to the inputs by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The work relies on standard tools from harmonic analysis and prior PDE results without introducing new free parameters or postulated entities.

axioms (2)
  • standard math The Fefferman-Stein inequality holds for the duality between Hardy space and BMO.
    Invoked to control the L2 space-time norms of the diffusion wave terms.
  • domain assumption The compressible NSK system on R^2 admits a modified Morawetz energy estimate that separates density and potential momentum components.
    Central to deriving the claimed difference in asymptotic profiles.

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Reference graph

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