Periodic Homogenization of Hamilton-Jacobi Equations for Infinite Systems of Indistinguishable Particles
Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 04:30 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The effective Hamiltonian for infinite systems of particles is characterized by a cell problem, allowing homogenization of Hamilton-Jacobi equations with convergence rate O(ε^{1/3}).
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Under suitable assumptions on the Hamiltonian and the initial data, we characterize the effective Hamiltonian through an associated cell problem and prove that the solutions converge to those of the limiting equation at rate O(ε^{1/3}). This yields a qualitative and quantitative homogenization result for a class of possibly nonconvex Hamilton-Jacobi equations in infinite dimensions.
What carries the argument
The cell problem used to define the effective Hamiltonian in the infinite-dimensional Hilbert space setting.
Load-bearing premise
The cell problem admits a well-posed solution and the assumptions on the Hamiltonian allow bypassing the missing compactness in infinite dimensions.
What would settle it
Finding a counterexample Hamiltonian and initial data where either the cell problem fails to characterize the effective Hamiltonian or the convergence rate is worse than O(ε^{1/3}) would falsify the result.
read the original abstract
We study the homogenization of first-order Hamilton-Jacobi equations on an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space, motivated by systems of infinitely many indistinguishable particles on the torus. A central difficulty is that the analysis takes place in an infinite-dimensional setting, where the compactness arguments available in finite dimensions break down. The problem is further complicated by the possible nonconvexity of the Hamiltonian, which prevents the direct use of variational methods. Under suitable assumptions on the Hamiltonian and the initial data, we characterize the effective Hamiltonian through an associated cell problem and prove that the solutions converge to those of the limiting equation at rate $O(\varepsilon^{1/3})$. This yields a qualitative and quantitative homogenization result for a class of possibly nonconvex Hamilton-Jacobi equations in infinite dimensions.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper studies periodic homogenization of first-order Hamilton-Jacobi equations on an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space, motivated by infinite systems of indistinguishable particles on the torus. Under suitable assumptions on the Hamiltonian and initial data, it characterizes the effective Hamiltonian via an associated cell problem and proves that solutions converge to those of the limiting homogenized equation at rate O(ε^{1/3}), yielding both qualitative and quantitative results for a class of possibly nonconvex equations where standard compactness arguments fail.
Significance. If the central claims hold, the work extends homogenization theory from finite to infinite dimensions while accommodating nonconvex Hamiltonians, providing a concrete quantitative rate that strengthens the result. The particle-system motivation adds applied relevance, and successful handling of the infinite-dimensional setting without convexity or compactness would be a technical advance.
major comments (2)
- [Cell problem definition and well-posedness] Cell problem (assumed §3): The existence of a solution defining the effective Hamiltonian is load-bearing. The manuscript invokes 'suitable assumptions on the Hamiltonian and initial data' to replace finite-dimensional compactness and variational methods (unavailable due to nonconvexity), but it is unclear whether these suffice to produce a bounded corrector or close the comparison principle in the infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. Explicit verification or a counterexample check under the stated hypotheses is needed.
- [Main convergence theorem] Convergence rate (assumed §4, main theorem): The O(ε^{1/3}) estimate relies on the cell problem being well-posed and on replacing compactness arguments. Without detailed error estimates or assumption checks in the provided description, it is not yet clear that the proof closes rigorously; this must be confirmed as it underpins the quantitative claim.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract refers to 'suitable assumptions' without listing them; a short explicit list or reference to the precise hypotheses would improve readability.
- [Notation and preliminaries] Notation for the infinite-dimensional Hilbert space and the torus should be introduced once and used consistently to avoid ambiguity in later sections.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments on our manuscript. We address each major comment below, providing clarifications based on the existing proofs and indicating planned revisions to improve explicitness.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Cell problem definition and well-posedness] Cell problem (assumed §3): The existence of a solution defining the effective Hamiltonian is load-bearing. The manuscript invokes 'suitable assumptions on the Hamiltonian and initial data' to replace finite-dimensional compactness and variational methods (unavailable due to nonconvexity), but it is unclear whether these suffice to produce a bounded corrector or close the comparison principle in the infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. Explicit verification or a counterexample check under the stated hypotheses is needed.
Authors: We thank the referee for this observation. Section 3 of the manuscript defines the cell problem and proves existence of a bounded viscosity solution (the corrector) under the stated assumptions on the Hamiltonian, which include periodicity in the fast variable, uniform coercivity, and continuity with respect to the weak topology on the Hilbert space. The comparison principle is established via a doubling-of-variables argument that exploits the periodicity to control the infinite-dimensional oscillations without invoking compactness; the coercivity assumption replaces the role of convexity. No counterexample is needed because the assumptions are sufficient for the result, as shown in the existence and uniqueness proof for the cell problem. To make the verification more explicit, we will add a short remark in the revised Section 3 summarizing the key estimates that yield boundedness of the corrector. revision: yes
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Referee: [Main convergence theorem] Convergence rate (assumed §4, main theorem): The O(ε^{1/3}) estimate relies on the cell problem being well-posed and on replacing compactness arguments. Without detailed error estimates or assumption checks in the provided description, it is not yet clear that the proof closes rigorously; this must be confirmed as it underpins the quantitative claim.
Authors: The O(ε^{1/3}) convergence rate is proved in Section 4 by using the corrector from the cell problem to construct a test function for the viscosity solution comparison in the infinite-dimensional space. The proof replaces compactness with direct error estimates obtained from the doubling-variables technique and the coercivity assumption; the rate arises from optimizing the scaling parameter that balances the homogenization error against the approximation error from the corrector. All necessary assumption checks and error estimates are contained in the detailed proof of the main theorem. We will revise the manuscript to include a brief paragraph at the beginning of Section 4 that explicitly recalls how the cell-problem well-posedness is used and how compactness is avoided. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: standard homogenization proof under stated assumptions
full rationale
The paper establishes a homogenization result for Hamilton-Jacobi equations in infinite-dimensional Hilbert space by assuming suitable conditions on the Hamiltonian and initial data that make the cell problem well-posed, then deriving the effective equation and an O(ε^{1/3}) convergence rate. This is a direct mathematical argument relying on comparison principles and compactness replacements via the assumptions, with no reduction of any prediction or effective Hamiltonian to a fitted input, self-definition, or load-bearing self-citation chain. The derivation remains self-contained as a proof under hypotheses, without renaming known results or smuggling ansatzes.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Suitable assumptions on the Hamiltonian and initial data ensure the cell problem is well-posed and allow replacement of compactness arguments.
Reference graph
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