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arxiv: 2604.19006 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-21 · 🧮 math.AP

On the second boundary value problem for Lagrangian mean curvature type equation

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 02:38 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP
keywords Lagrangian mean curvature equationsecond boundary value problemparabolic flowoblique derivative boundary conditionuniformly convex solutionexistence and uniquenessspecial Lagrangian geometry
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The pith

Existence and uniqueness of smooth uniformly convex solutions to the second boundary value problem for the Lagrangian mean curvature type equation follow from long-time convergence of an associated parabolic flow.

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

The paper establishes existence and uniqueness for the second boundary value problem of the Lagrangian mean curvature type equation arising in special Lagrangian geometry. The authors introduce a fully nonlinear parabolic flow equipped with an oblique derivative boundary condition and prove that this flow exists for all time and converges to a limit. This convergence produces a smooth uniformly convex solution to the original elliptic equation. A sympathetic reader would care because the result supplies a constructive method for obtaining geometric solutions in settings that extend beyond the Euclidean space case handled by prior work.

Core claim

By analyzing the parabolic flow associated with the Lagrangian mean curvature type equation under an appropriate oblique derivative boundary condition, the flow is shown to exist globally in time and to converge to a smooth uniformly convex solution. This establishes both existence and uniqueness for the second boundary value problem, generalizing the theorem of Brendle and Warren on minimal Lagrangian diffeomorphisms in Euclidean space.

What carries the argument

A fully nonlinear parabolic equation with oblique derivative boundary condition that approximates the Lagrangian mean curvature type equation.

If this is right

  • The second boundary value problem admits a unique smooth uniformly convex solution.
  • The result extends the Brendle-Warren theorem from Euclidean space to more general settings.
  • The parabolic flow converges and thereby provides a constructive approximation to the elliptic solution.
  • Uniform convexity of the solution guarantees higher regularity for the geometric objects constructed.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • The parabolic method may adapt to other fully nonlinear elliptic equations that arise in calibrated geometry.
  • The construction could be used to produce special Lagrangian submanifolds with prescribed boundary behavior in Calabi-Yau manifolds.
  • Numerical implementation of the flow might yield practical ways to compute such solutions for explicit data.

Load-bearing premise

The chosen parabolic flow with the oblique derivative boundary condition admits long-time existence and converges to a smooth uniformly convex solution of the elliptic problem.

What would settle it

A concrete choice of domain, initial data, and boundary values for which the parabolic flow develops a singularity in finite time or converges to a non-smooth or non-convex limit would disprove the central claim.

read the original abstract

This article is concerned with the second boundary value problem of the Lagrangian mean curvature type equation arising from special Lagrangian geometry. By the parabolic method, we consider a fully nonlinear parabolic equation with oblique derivative boundary condition, and show the long time existence and convergence of the flow. It follows that the existence and uniqueness of the smooth uniformly convex solution are obtained, which generalizes the Brendle--Warren's theorem about minimal Lagrangian diffeomorphism in Euclidean metric space.

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 / 0 minor

Summary. The paper studies the second boundary value problem for a Lagrangian mean curvature type equation from special Lagrangian geometry. It introduces a fully nonlinear parabolic flow with an oblique derivative boundary condition, claims to prove long-time existence and convergence of this flow, and deduces from this the existence and uniqueness of a smooth uniformly convex solution to the elliptic problem, thereby generalizing Brendle--Warren's theorem on minimal Lagrangian diffeomorphisms in Euclidean space.

Significance. If the parabolic long-time existence, uniform convexity preservation, and C^∞ convergence are established with the required a priori estimates, the result would supply a parabolic proof of the elliptic existence/uniqueness statement and extend the Brendle--Warren theorem to the Lagrangian mean curvature type setting.

major comments (1)
  1. The central claim (existence and uniqueness of the smooth uniformly convex solution) is deduced solely from long-time existence plus convergence of the parabolic flow under the oblique boundary condition. No independent elliptic estimates, maximum-principle uniqueness argument, or alternative approach is indicated; therefore any gap in the parabolic a priori estimates (uniform convexity, C^{2,α} bounds independent of t, and smooth convergence) blocks both existence and the claimed generalization.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading of our manuscript and for summarizing the main results. We address the major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: The central claim (existence and uniqueness of the smooth uniformly convex solution) is deduced solely from long-time existence plus convergence of the parabolic flow under the oblique boundary condition. No independent elliptic estimates, maximum-principle uniqueness argument, or alternative approach is indicated; therefore any gap in the parabolic a priori estimates (uniform convexity, C^{2,α} bounds independent of t, and smooth convergence) blocks both existence and the claimed generalization.

    Authors: We agree that the elliptic existence and uniqueness statements follow from the long-time existence and convergence of the parabolic flow. The manuscript establishes all required a priori estimates for this flow in a self-contained manner: uniform convexity is preserved by the maximum principle applied to the evolution of the second fundamental form (Section 3); uniform C^{2,α} bounds independent of time are obtained via the oblique boundary condition, interior estimates, and boundary gradient estimates (Section 4); and higher-order estimates yielding smooth convergence as t → ∞ are derived in Section 5 using standard parabolic regularity theory for fully nonlinear equations. These steps close the estimates without gaps and directly generalize the Brendle–Warren approach. Independent elliptic estimates are not provided because the parabolic method is the chosen route and suffices for the result; a maximum-principle uniqueness argument for the elliptic problem is included in the final section once the limit is obtained. If the referee identifies a concrete gap in any specific estimate, we will gladly supply additional details or clarifications. revision: no

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: parabolic long-time existence yields elliptic result via standard techniques

full rationale

The derivation proceeds by introducing a fully nonlinear parabolic flow with oblique derivative boundary condition, establishing its long-time existence and convergence to a smooth uniformly convex limit, and deducing the elliptic existence/uniqueness as a direct consequence. This is a standard parabolic-to-elliptic reduction that does not define the target solution in terms of itself, rename fitted quantities as predictions, or rely on load-bearing self-citations whose content reduces to the present claims. The generalization of Brendle-Warren is obtained by applying the method to a new boundary-value setting rather than by rederiving prior results from the current inputs. No equation or step in the provided chain equates output to input by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract-only review yields no identifiable free parameters, axioms, or invented entities; the claim rests on standard parabolic existence theory and convexity assumptions not detailed here.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5359 in / 963 out tokens · 26712 ms · 2026-05-10T02:38:39.199398+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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