pith. sign in

arxiv: 2601.18046 · v2 · submitted 2026-01-26 · 🧮 math.AP · math.DG

Heat flow of harmonic maps into CAT(0)-spaces

Pith reviewed 2026-05-16 11:36 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP math.DG
keywords harmonic map heat flowCAT(0) spaceselliptic regularizationLipschitz continuityAlmgren-Poon frequency functionmonotonicity methodsEells-Sampson theoremvariational structure
0
0 comments X

The pith

Elliptic regularization establishes global existence and spatial Lipschitz continuity for harmonic heat flows into CAT(0) spaces.

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

The paper presents an elliptic regularization of the gradient flow for the Dirichlet energy to construct suitable weak solutions of the heat flow of harmonic maps into CAT(0) metric spaces. This yields global existence and uniqueness in a weak sense while also delivering spatial Lipschitz continuity for the solutions, which resolves a longstanding open question. The same framework supplies a new proof of the Eells-Sampson theorem even when the target is a smooth Riemannian manifold, by introducing a dynamical variational principle. The approach relies on preserving enough variational structure in the regularization so that an Almgren-Poon-type parabolic frequency function remains monotone and produces uniform Lipschitz bounds that pass to the limit.

Core claim

By applying an elliptic regularization to the gradient flow of the Dirichlet energy, the authors obtain global-in-time suitable weak solutions to the harmonic map heat flow into any CAT(0) space. The regularization preserves sufficient variational structure to permit the definition of a parabolic frequency function of Almgren-Poon type whose monotonicity implies uniform spatial Lipschitz bounds; these bounds survive passage to the limit as the regularization parameter tends to zero, thereby establishing both existence and the desired regularity.

What carries the argument

Elliptic regularization of the Dirichlet energy gradient flow together with a monotone parabolic Almgren-Poon-type frequency function that controls spatial Lipschitz constants.

If this is right

  • Global existence and uniqueness hold for suitable weak solutions of the harmonic map heat flow into arbitrary CAT(0) targets.
  • All such solutions are Lipschitz continuous in the spatial variables.
  • The Eells-Sampson theorem receives a new proof via a dynamical variational principle that works even for smooth Riemannian targets.
  • Monotonicity methods extend for the first time to parabolic deformations of maps into singular metric spaces.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • The technique may extend to other parabolic geometric flows whose targets admit a notion of non-positive curvature.
  • Spatial Lipschitz control could be used to study long-time convergence or singularity formation for these flows in non-smooth settings.
  • The frequency-function approach might yield higher regularity or quantitative estimates once the Lipschitz bound is in hand.

Load-bearing premise

The elliptic regularization must keep enough variational structure intact for the parabolic frequency function to stay monotone and deliver uniform Lipschitz bounds that survive the vanishing limit.

What would settle it

A concrete harmonic heat flow into a CAT(0) space, such as the Euclidean plane or a tree, whose solution develops a jump discontinuity in finite positive time would falsify the claimed spatial Lipschitz continuity.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2601.18046 by Antonio Segatti, Changyou Wang, Fang-Hua Lin, Yannick Sire.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: The homogeneous tree with Q = 6 Harmonic maps into real trees have been considered by Sun [62]. As mentioned in [62], R-trees are limits in the Gromov-Hausdorff sense of NPC spaces whose curvature goes to negative infinity. Real trees are also instrumental in gauge theory and the construction of Higgs bundles after Corlette [15] and the works of Daskalopoulos, Dostoglou and Wentworth [19]. Interestingly, w… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

We introduce a new approach to prove the global existence and uniqueness of suitable weak solutions of the heat flow of harmonic mappings into CAT(0) metric spaces. Our method allows also to prove Lipschitz continuity in spatial variables for such solutions into any CAT$(0)$-space, answering a long-standing open problem in the field. Our approach is based on an elliptic regularization of the gradient flow of the Dirichlet energy and even in the case of smooth Riemannian targets provides a novel viewpoint, together with a new Dynamical Variational Principle and a new proof of the celebrated Eells-Sampson theorem. The spatial Lipschitz regularity for such weak solutions is achieved by fully exploiting the variational structure of the problem at the regularized level and introducing a parabolic frequency function of Almgren-Poon type. Our contribution is the first instance of the use of monotonicity methods for parabolic deformations of maps into singular targets.

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

1 major / 1 minor

Summary. The paper introduces an elliptic regularization of the gradient flow of the Dirichlet energy to prove global existence and uniqueness of suitable weak solutions to the heat flow of harmonic maps into CAT(0) metric spaces. It further claims spatial Lipschitz continuity for these solutions into arbitrary CAT(0) targets (resolving a long-standing open problem) via a new parabolic Almgren-Poon-type frequency function whose monotonicity is derived from the preserved variational structure at the regularized level; the same framework yields a new proof of the Eells-Sampson theorem for smooth Riemannian targets through a Dynamical Variational Principle.

Significance. If the central claims hold, the work resolves an open regularity question for harmonic map heat flows into singular metric spaces and introduces the first application of monotonicity methods to parabolic deformations into CAT(0) targets. The regularization technique and frequency-function approach also supply a fresh perspective on the classical Eells-Sampson theorem, with potential to extend to other geometric flows in non-smooth settings.

major comments (1)
  1. [Section deriving monotonicity of the Almgren-Poon frequency function and the subsequent limit passage] The passage from the regularized flow to the limit ε→0 (detailed in the section establishing the Lipschitz bound) requires uniform control on the error terms arising from the lack of smooth Riemannian structure in CAT(0) spaces when deriving the monotonicity inequality for the parabolic frequency function. The manuscript must supply an explicit ε-independent estimate (or a compactness argument absorbing the approximation errors uniformly) to guarantee that the resulting gradient bounds remain valid after the limit; without this, the claimed spatial Lipschitz continuity for arbitrary CAT(0) targets rests on an unverified uniformity.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Introduction] Clarify the precise definition of 'suitable weak solutions' early in the introduction, as the term is used in the abstract but its relation to existing notions (e.g., Korevaar-Schoen or other metric-space weak solutions) is not immediately apparent.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading of our manuscript and the positive evaluation of its significance. We address the single major comment below and will incorporate clarifications in the revision.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Section deriving monotonicity of the Almgren-Poon frequency function and the subsequent limit passage] The passage from the regularized flow to the limit ε→0 (detailed in the section establishing the Lipschitz bound) requires uniform control on the error terms arising from the lack of smooth Riemannian structure in CAT(0) spaces when deriving the monotonicity inequality for the parabolic frequency function. The manuscript must supply an explicit ε-independent estimate (or a compactness argument absorbing the approximation errors uniformly) to guarantee that the resulting gradient bounds remain valid after the limit; without this, the claimed spatial Lipschitz continuity for arbitrary CAT(0) targets rests on an unverified uniformity.

    Authors: We thank the referee for highlighting the need for explicit uniformity in the limit passage. The monotonicity of the parabolic frequency function is derived directly at the regularized level, where the elliptic regularization preserves the variational structure of the Dirichlet energy. The error terms induced by the CAT(0) inequality (rather than a smooth Riemannian metric) are controlled via the convexity of the distance function in CAT(0) spaces together with the uniform energy bounds obtained from the regularization; these controls yield constants independent of ε. Consequently the monotonicity inequality passes to the limit ε→0 and produces the spatial Lipschitz bound. To make this uniformity fully transparent we will add, in the revised manuscript, an explicit lemma isolating the ε-independent error estimate (derived from the CAT(0) comparison and the preserved energy dissipation) together with a short compactness argument confirming that the frequency monotonicity survives the limit. This addition clarifies the argument without changing its substance. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: derivation relies on independent regularization and monotonicity from variational structure

full rationale

The paper introduces an elliptic regularization of the Dirichlet energy gradient flow and defines a new parabolic Almgren-Poon-type frequency function whose monotonicity is derived directly from the preserved variational structure at the regularized level. Lipschitz bounds are obtained by passing these uniform estimates to the limit as the regularization parameter vanishes. No step reduces a claimed result (existence, uniqueness, or spatial Lipschitz continuity) to a fitted parameter, self-definition, or load-bearing self-citation by construction. The abstract and description present the extension to CAT(0) targets as a novel application of monotonicity methods without any quoted reduction of the central claims to the inputs themselves.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claims rest on standard properties of CAT(0) spaces and the Dirichlet energy together with the technical assumption that elliptic regularization commutes appropriately with the gradient flow in the singular setting.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption CAT(0) spaces admit unique geodesics and satisfy the convexity inequality for distances.
    Invoked throughout the theory of harmonic maps into metric spaces and required for the energy functional to be well-defined and lower semicontinuous.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5452 in / 1281 out tokens · 52245 ms · 2026-05-16T11:36:44.694687+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

64 extracted references · 64 canonical work pages

  1. [1]

    Almgren, Jr

    Frederick J. Almgren, Jr. Almgren ’s big regularity paper , volume 1 of World Scientific Monograph Series in Mathe- matics. W orld Scientific Publishing Co., Inc., River Edge, NJ, 2000 . Q-valued functions minimizing Dirichlet’s integral and the regularity of area-minimizing rectifiable currents up to codimension 2, With a preface by Jean E. Taylor and Vladi...

  2. [2]

    Gradient flows in metric spaces and in the space of probabilit y measures

    Luigi Ambrosio, Nicola Gigli, and Giuseppe Savaré. Gradient flows in metric spaces and in the space of probabilit y measures. Lectures in Mathematics ETH Zürich. Birkhäuser Verlag, Ba sel, second edition, 2008

  3. [3]

    Some nonlinear problems in Riemannian geometry

    Thierry Aubin. Some nonlinear problems in Riemannian geometry . Springer Monographs in Mathematics. Springer- Verlag, Berlin, 1998

  4. [4]

    On the existence and Hölder regular ity of solutions to some nonlinear Cauchy-Neumann problems

    Alessandro Audrito. On the existence and Hölder regular ity of solutions to some nonlinear Cauchy-Neumann problems . J. Evol. Equ. , 23(3):Paper No. 58, 45, 2023

  5. [5]

    Optimal control and viscosity solutions of Hamilton-Jacob i-Bellman equa- tions

    Martino Bardi and Italo Capuzzo-Dolcetta. Optimal control and viscosity solutions of Hamilton-Jacob i-Bellman equa- tions. Systems & Control: Foundations & Applications. Birkhäuse r Boston, Inc., Boston, MA, 1997. With appendices by Maurizio Falcone and Pierpaolo Soravia

  6. [6]

    Bridson and André Haefliger

    Martin R. Bridson and André Haefliger. Metric spaces of non-positive curvature , volume 319 of Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles o f Mathematical Sciences] . Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1999

  7. [7]

    L. A. Caffarelli and Fang Hua Lin. An optimal partition pro blem for eigenvalues. J. Sci. Comput. , 31(1-2):5–18, 2007

  8. [8]

    L. A. Caffarelli and Fang-Hua Lin. Singularly perturbed e lliptic systems and multi-valued harmonic functions with f ree boundaries. J. Amer. Math. Soc. , 21(3):847–862, 2008

  9. [9]

    Caffarelli and Fang Hua Lin

    Luis A. Caffarelli and Fang Hua Lin. Analysis on the juncti ons of domain walls. Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst. , 28(3):915– 929, 2010. 45

  10. [10]

    The weak solutions to the evolution proble ms of harmonic maps

    Yun Mei Chen. The weak solutions to the evolution proble ms of harmonic maps. Math. Z. , 201(1):69–74, 1989

  11. [11]

    Existence and partial r egularity results for the heat flow for harmonic maps

    Yun Mei Chen and Michael Struwe. Existence and partial r egularity results for the heat flow for harmonic maps. Math. Z., 201(1):83–103, 1989

  12. [12]

    Evolution equations with a free boundary condition

    Yunmei Chen and Fang Hua Lin. Evolution equations with a free boundary condition. J. Geom. Anal. , 8(2):179–197, 1998

  13. [13]

    Conti, S

    M. Conti, S. Terracini, and G. Verzini. An optimal parti tion problem related to nonlinear eigenvalues. J. Funct. Anal. , 198(1):160–196, 2003

  14. [14]

    Monica Conti, Susanna Terracini, and G. Verzini. Asymp totic estimates for the spatial segregation of competitive systems. Adv. Math. , 195(2):524–560, 2005

  15. [15]

    Flat G-bundles with canonical metrics

    Kevin Corlette. Flat G-bundles with canonical metrics. J. Differential Geom. , 28(3):361–382, 1988

  16. [16]

    Archimedean superrigidity and hyperb olic geometry

    Kevin Corlette. Archimedean superrigidity and hyperb olic geometry. Ann. of Math. (2) , 135(1):165–182, 1992

  17. [17]

    Sub-criticality of non-local Schrödinger systems with antisymmetric poten tials and applications to half-harmonic maps

    Francesca Da Lio and Tristan Rivière. Sub-criticality of non-local Schrödinger systems with antisymmetric poten tials and applications to half-harmonic maps. Adv. Math. , 227(3):1300–1348, 2011

  18. [18]

    Three-term commu tator estimates and the regularity of 1 2 -harmonic maps into spheres

    Francesca Da Lio and Tristan Rivière. Three-term commu tator estimates and the regularity of 1 2 -harmonic maps into spheres. Anal. PDE , 4(1):149–190, 2011

  19. [19]

    Daskalopoulos, S

    G. Daskalopoulos, S. Dostoglou, and R. W entworth. Char acter varieties and harmonic maps to R-trees. Math. Res. Lett., 5(4):523–533, 1998

  20. [20]

    Fixed point a nd rigidity theorems for harmonic maps into NPC spaces

    Georgios Daskalopoulos and Chikako Mese. Fixed point a nd rigidity theorems for harmonic maps into NPC spaces. Geom. Dedicata, 141:33–57, 2009

  21. [21]

    Harmonic map s between singular spaces I

    Georgios Daskalopoulos and Chikako Mese. Harmonic map s between singular spaces I. Comm. Anal. Geom. , 18(2):257– 337, 2010

  22. [22]

    Monotonicit y properties of harmonic maps into NPC spaces

    Georgios Daskalopoulos and Chikako Mese. Monotonicit y properties of harmonic maps into NPC spaces. J. Fixed Point Theory Appl. , 11(2):225–243, 2012

  23. [23]

    Conjectures concerning some evolutio n problems

    Ennio De Giorgi. Conjectures concerning some evolutio n problems. volume 81, pages 255–268. 1996. A celebration of John F. Nash, Jr

  24. [24]

    James Eells, Jr. and J. H. Sampson. Harmonic mappings of Riemannian manifolds. Amer. J. Math. , 86:109–160, 1964

  25. [25]

    Partial regularity for harmonic maps of evolution into spheres

    Mikhail Feldman. Partial regularity for harmonic maps of evolution into spheres. Comm. Partial Differential Equations , 19(5-6):761–790, 1994

  26. [26]

    A Bochner formula for harmonic maps into non-positively curved metric spaces

    Brian Freidin. A Bochner formula for harmonic maps into non-positively curved metric spaces. Calc. Var. Partial Differential Equations , 58(4):Paper No. 121, 28, 2019

  27. [27]

    On the regularity of harmonic maps from rcd(k, n) to cat(0) spaces and related results

    Nicola Gigli. On the regularity of harmonic maps from rcd(k, n) to cat(0) spaces and related results. https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.04317

  28. [28]

    A differential persp ective on gradient flows on CAT(k)-spaces and applications

    Nicola Gigli and Francesco Nobili. A differential persp ective on gradient flows on CAT(k)-spaces and applications. J. Geom. Anal. , 31(12):11780–11818, 2021

  29. [29]

    Korevaar-Schoen ’s directional energy and Ambrosio’s regular Lagrangian flo ws

    Nicola Gigli and Alexander Tyulenev. Korevaar-Schoen ’s directional energy and Ambrosio’s regular Lagrangian flo ws. Math. Z. , 298(3-4):1221–1261, 2021

  30. [30]

    M. Gromov. Hyperbolic groups. In Essays in group theory , pages 75–263. Springer, 1987

  31. [31]

    Harmonic maps into s ingular spaces and p-adic superrigidity for lattices in groups of rank one

    Mikhail Gromov and Richard Schoen. Harmonic maps into s ingular spaces and p-adic superrigidity for lattices in groups of rank one. Inst. Hautes Études Sci. Publ. Math. , (76):165–246, 1992

  32. [32]

    On homotopic harmonic maps

    Philip Hartman. On homotopic harmonic maps. Canadian J. Math. , 19:673–687, 1967

  33. [33]

    Partial regularity of the heat flow of half-harmonic maps and applications to harmonic maps with free boundary

    Ali Hyder, Antonio Segatti, Yannick Sire, and Changyou W ang. Partial regularity of the heat flow of half-harmonic maps and applications to harmonic maps with free boundary. Comm. Partial Differential Equations , 47(9):1845–1882, 2022

  34. [34]

    Elliptic regularization and partial regu larity for motion by mean curvature

    Tom Ilmanen. Elliptic regularization and partial regu larity for motion by mean curvature. Mem. Amer. Math. Soc. , 108(520):x+90, 1994

  35. [35]

    Equilibrium maps between metric spaces

    Jürgen Jost. Equilibrium maps between metric spaces. Calc. Var. Partial Differential Equations , 2(2):173–204, 1994

  36. [36]

    Generalized harmonic maps between metric spaces

    Jürgen Jost. Generalized harmonic maps between metric spaces. In Geometric analysis and the calculus of variations , pages 143–174. Int. Press, Cambridge, MA, 1996

  37. [37]

    Nonlinear Dirichlet forms

    Jürgen Jost. Nonlinear Dirichlet forms. In New directions in Dirichlet forms , volume 8 of AMS/IP Stud. Adv. Math. , pages 1–47. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 1998

  38. [38]

    Riemannian geometry and geometric analysis

    Jürgen Jost. Riemannian geometry and geometric analysis . Universitext. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, fifth edition, 20 08

  39. [39]

    Rectifiable metric spaces: local stru cture and regularity of the Hausdorff measure

    Bernd Kirchheim. Rectifiable metric spaces: local stru cture and regularity of the Hausdorff measure. Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. , 121(1):113–123, 1994

  40. [40]

    Korevaar and Richard M

    Nicholas J. Korevaar and Richard M. Schoen. Sobolev spa ces and harmonic maps for metric space targets. Comm. Anal. Geom., 1(3-4):561–659, 1993

  41. [41]

    Korevaar and Richard M

    Nicholas J. Korevaar and Richard M. Schoen. Global exis tence theorems for harmonic maps to non-locally compact spaces. Comm. Anal. Geom. , 5(2):333–387, 1997. 46 F ANG-HUA LIN, ANTONIO SEGATTI, YANNICK SIRE, AND CHANGYO U W ANG

  42. [42]

    Analysis on singular spaces

    Fang Hua Lin. Analysis on singular spaces. In Collection of papers on geometry, analysis and mathematical physics, pages 114–126. W orld Sci. Publ., River Edge, NJ, 1997

  43. [43]

    Remarks on the heat flow of harmonic maps into cat(0)-spaces

    Fanghua Lin and Changyou W ang. Remarks on the heat flow of harmonic maps into cat(0)-spaces. arXiv:2603.10411

  44. [44]

    Harmonic and quasi-harm onic spheres

    FangHua Lin and ChangYou W ang. Harmonic and quasi-harm onic spheres. Comm. Anal. Geom. , 7(2):397–429, 1999

  45. [45]

    Harmonic and quasi-harm onic spheres

    FangHua Lin and ChangYou W ang. Harmonic and quasi-harm onic spheres. II. Comm. Anal. Geom. , 10(2):341–375, 2002

  46. [46]

    Harmonic and quasi-harm onic spheres

    FangHua Lin and ChangYou W ang. Harmonic and quasi-harm onic spheres. III. Rectifiability of the parabolic defect measure and generalized varifold flows. Ann. Inst. H. Poincaré C Anal. Non Linéaire , 19(2):209–259, 2002

  47. [47]

    The analysis of harmonic maps and their heat flows

    Fanghua Lin and Changyou W ang. The analysis of harmonic maps and their heat flows . W orld Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., Hackensack, NJ, 2008

  48. [48]

    Sur certaines équations parabol iques non linéaires

    Jacques-Louis Lions. Sur certaines équations parabol iques non linéaires. Bull. Soc. Math. France , 93:155–175, 1965

  49. [49]

    Uwe F. Mayer. Gradient flows on nonpositively curved met ric spaces and harmonic maps. Comm. Anal. Geom. , 6(2):199–253, 1998

  50. [50]

    A class of minimum p rinciples for characterizing the trajectories and the rela xation of dissipative systems

    Alexander Mielke and Michael Ortiz. A class of minimum p rinciples for characterizing the trajectories and the rela xation of dissipative systems. ESAIM Control Optim. Calc. Var. , 14(3):494–516, 2008

  51. [51]

    W eighted ener gy-dissipation functionals for gradient flows

    Alexander Mielke and Ulisse Stefanelli. W eighted ener gy-dissipation functionals for gradient flows. ESAIM Control Optim. Calc. Var. , 17(1):52–85, 2011

  52. [52]

    Lipschitz continui ty and bochner-eells-sampson inequality for harmonic maps from rcd(k, n) spaces to cat(0) spaces

    Andrea Mondino and Daniele Semola. Lipschitz continui ty and bochner-eells-sampson inequality for harmonic maps from rcd(k, n) spaces to cat(0) spaces. https://arxiv.org/abs/2202.01590

  53. [53]

    Gradient flows and evolution variational inequalities in metric spaces

    Matteo Muratori and Giuseppe Savaré. Gradient flows and evolution variational inequalities in metric spaces. I: St ruc- tural properties. J. Funct. Anal. , 278(4):108347, 67, 2020

  54. [54]

    Unique continuation for parabolic eq uations

    Chi-Cheung Poon. Unique continuation for parabolic eq uations. Comm. Partial Differential Equations , 21(3-4):521– 539, 1996

  55. [55]

    A variational principle for gradient flo ws in metric spaces

    Riccarda Rossi, Giuseppe Savaré, Antonio Segatti, and Ulisse Stefanelli. A variational principle for gradient flo ws in metric spaces. C. R. Math. Acad. Sci. Paris , 349(23-24):1225–1228, 2011

  56. [56]

    W eighted energy-dissipation principl e for gradient flows in metric spaces

    Riccarda Rossi, Giuseppe Savaré, Antonio Segatti, and Ulisse Stefanelli. W eighted energy-dissipation principl e for gradient flows in metric spaces. J. Math. Pures Appl. (9) , 127:1–66, 2019

  57. [57]

    A regularity theor y for harmonic maps

    Richard Schoen and Karen Uhlenbeck. A regularity theor y for harmonic maps. J. Differential Geometry , 17(2):307–335, 1982

  58. [58]

    Nonlinear wave equations as limits of convex minimization problems: proof of a conjec ture by De Giorgi

    Enrico Serra and Paolo Tilli. Nonlinear wave equations as limits of convex minimization problems: proof of a conjec ture by De Giorgi. Ann. of Math. (2) , 175(3):1551–1574, 2012

  59. [59]

    The De Giorgi conjecture on ellipti c regularization

    Ulisse Stefanelli. The De Giorgi conjecture on ellipti c regularization. Math. Models Methods Appl. Sci. , 21(6):1377–1394, 2011

  60. [60]

    The weighted Inertia-Energy-Diss ipation principle

    Ulisse Stefanelli. The weighted Inertia-Energy-Diss ipation principle. Math. Models Methods Appl. Sci. , 35(2):223–282, 2025

  61. [61]

    The evolution of harmonic mappings wit h free boundaries

    Michael Struwe. The evolution of harmonic mappings wit h free boundaries. Manuscripta Math. , 70(4):373–384, 1991

  62. [62]

    Regularity of harmonic maps to trees

    Xiaofeng Sun. Regularity of harmonic maps to trees. Amer. J. Math. , 125(4):737–771, 2003

  63. [63]

    Lipschitz regularity o f harmonic map heat flows into cat(0)-spaces

    Hui-Chun Zhang and Xi-Ping Zhu. Lipschitz regularity o f harmonic map heat flows into cat(0)-spaces. arXiv:2601.20579

  64. [64]

    Felice Casorati

    Hui-Chun Zhang and Xi-Ping Zhu. Lipschitz continuity o f harmonic maps between Alexandrov spaces. Invent. Math. , 211(3):863–934, 2018. Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York Unive rsity, NY 10012, USA Email address : linf@math.nyu.edu Dipartimento di Matematica “Felice Casorati”, Università di Pa via, via Ferrata 1, 27100 Pa via, Italy Emai...