Asymptotic behavior of solutions to elliptic equations in 2D exterior domains
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 00:22 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Solutions to second-order elliptic equations in 2D exterior domains admit almost sharp pointwise decay estimates at infinity when they belong to Lorentz or weak Lebesgue spaces.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Under the assumption that the solution belongs to the Lorentz space L^{p,q} or the weak Lebesgue space L^{p,∞} with certain conditions on the coefficients, we give natural and an almost sharp pointwise estimate of the solution at spatial infinity. The proof is based on the argument by Korobkov--Pileckas--Russo, in which the decay property of the solution to the vorticity equation of the two-dimensional Navier--Stokes equations was studied.
What carries the argument
Adaptation of the Korobkov-Pileckas-Russo argument that extracts pointwise decay from Lorentz or weak-Lebesgue integrability via integral representations in exterior domains.
If this is right
- The decay rate is controlled by the Lorentz indices p and q, yielding bounds that become sharper as p increases.
- The estimates hold uniformly outside a large compact set and require no further decay assumptions on the right-hand side beyond the given integrability.
- The result applies to a broad class of second-order operators whose coefficients obey the structural conditions needed for the adapted argument.
- Global integrability in Lorentz spaces implies local boundedness and decay at infinity simultaneously for solutions in exterior domains.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same integrability-to-decay passage may apply to higher-order elliptic operators or to systems whose fundamental solutions admit comparable integral representations.
- One could test whether the method produces decay for solutions of parabolic equations posed in exterior domains under analogous space-time integrability.
- The technique might link to questions in potential theory about how L^{p,∞} membership controls the growth of harmonic functions at infinity.
- Explicit radial solutions in annular regions could be used to confirm sharpness of the constants appearing in the pointwise bound.
Load-bearing premise
The solution must belong to L^{p,q} or L^{p,∞} and the coefficients must satisfy the restrictions that permit direct use of the Korobkov-Pileckas-Russo integral-identity method.
What would settle it
Exhibit an explicit solution to a model elliptic equation in the complement of a disk that lies in L^{p,∞} yet violates the predicted pointwise upper bound for large |x|.
read the original abstract
The asymptotic behavior of solutions to the second order elliptic equations in exterior domains is studied. In particular, under the assumption that the solution belongs to the Lorentz space $L^{p,q}$ or the weak Lebesgue space $L^{p,\infty}$ with certain conditions on the coefficients, we give natural and an almost sharp pointwise estimate of the solution at spacial infinity. The proof is based on the argument by Korobkov--Pileckas--Russo [4], in which the decay property of the solution to the vorticity equation of the two-dimensional Navier--Stokes equations was studied.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper studies the asymptotic behavior at spatial infinity of solutions to second-order linear elliptic equations in two-dimensional exterior domains. Under the assumption that the solution lies in a Lorentz space L^{p,q} or weak Lebesgue space L^{p,∞} (with p,q in suitable ranges) and that the coefficients satisfy the restrictions needed to adapt the integral-identity argument of Korobkov-Pileckas-Russo, the authors derive a natural, almost-sharp pointwise decay estimate. The proof strategy consists in carrying over the vorticity-equation technique from the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes system to the general elliptic setting.
Significance. If the adaptation is carried out correctly, the result extends known decay estimates from the Navier-Stokes vorticity equation to a wider class of elliptic operators while preserving the almost-sharp character of the bound. The use of Lorentz and weak-Lebesgue integrability conditions is a natural strengthening that still yields pointwise control; this could be useful for applications involving exterior problems with limited regularity.
major comments (2)
- [Proof section (likely §3 or §4)] The central claim rests on the successful transfer of the Korobkov-Pileckas-Russo integral-identity argument. The manuscript should contain an explicit verification (in the proof section) that the divergence-structure and maximum-principle steps remain valid under the stated coefficient hypotheses; without this verification the adaptation cannot be checked from the text alone.
- [Theorem 1.1 (or equivalent main result)] The precise ranges of p and q for which the Lorentz/weak-Lebesgue assumption yields the claimed decay are not stated in the abstract and must be made explicit in the main theorem statement, because the admissible range is load-bearing for the integrability hypothesis.
minor comments (3)
- [Abstract] Abstract: 'spacial' should be 'spatial'.
- [Abstract] The statement 'natural and an almost sharp' is slightly awkward; rephrase for clarity.
- [Introduction and Theorem 1.1] Ensure that the coefficient restrictions (e.g., boundedness, ellipticity constants, or decay) are listed uniformly in both the introduction and the statement of the main theorem.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and positive recommendation. We address the two major comments below and will revise the manuscript accordingly.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Proof section (likely §3 or §4)] The central claim rests on the successful transfer of the Korobkov-Pileckas-Russo integral-identity argument. The manuscript should contain an explicit verification (in the proof section) that the divergence-structure and maximum-principle steps remain valid under the stated coefficient hypotheses; without this verification the adaptation cannot be checked from the text alone.
Authors: We agree that an explicit verification of the divergence-structure and maximum-principle steps under the coefficient hypotheses would strengthen the presentation. In the revised manuscript we will insert a short dedicated paragraph (or subsection) in the proof section that recalls the relevant steps from Korobkov-Pileckas-Russo and verifies that they remain valid under our assumptions on the coefficients. revision: yes
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Referee: [Theorem 1.1 (or equivalent main result)] The precise ranges of p and q for which the Lorentz/weak-Lebesgue assumption yields the claimed decay are not stated in the abstract and must be made explicit in the main theorem statement, because the admissible range is load-bearing for the integrability hypothesis.
Authors: The admissible ranges of p and q are stated in the main theorem (Theorem 1.1). We acknowledge that they are not mentioned in the abstract. In the revision we will update the abstract to include the precise ranges and will ensure the theorem statement makes the dependence on these ranges fully explicit. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper adapts the integral-identity argument from the external reference [4] (Korobkov-Pileckas-Russo on Navier-Stokes vorticity) to second-order elliptic operators, under stated Lorentz/weak-Lebesgue integrability on the solution and coefficient restrictions. No load-bearing step reduces the claimed pointwise decay estimate at infinity to a quantity defined by the authors themselves, a fitted parameter renamed as prediction, or a self-citation chain. The derivation chain is self-contained against the external benchmark and does not exhibit any of the enumerated circularity patterns.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math Standard embedding and regularity properties of Lorentz spaces L^{p,q} and weak Lebesgue spaces L^{p,∞}
- domain assumption The Korobkov-Pileckas-Russo decay argument applies verbatim once the integrability and coefficient conditions are met
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AbsoluteFloorClosure.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
under the assumption that the solution belongs to the Lorentz space L^{p,q} or the weak Lebesgue space L^{p,∞} ... pointwise estimate of the solution at spatial infinity. The proof is based on the argument by Korobkov–Pileckas–Russo
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
∫_{u^{-1}(t)} |∇u| dS ≤ C^* t ... coarea formula ... tg(t)/2^p ≤ C'_* (∫_{E_t} |u|^p dx)^{1/p}
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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L. C. Evans, R. F. Gariepy , Measure Theory and Fine Properties of Functions, Revised Edition, CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, 2015
work page 2015
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D. Gilbarg, N. Trudinger , Elliptic Partial Differential Equations of Second Order, 2 nd ed., Springer, 1983
work page 1983
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[3]
D. Gilbarg, H. F. Weinberger , Asymptotic properties of steady plane solutions of the Navier–Stokes equations with bounded Dirichlet integral , Ann. Sc. Norm. Pisa (4) 5 (1978), 381–404
work page 1978
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[4]
M. V. Korobkov, K. Pileckas, R. Russo , On convergence of arbitrary D-Solution of steady Navier–Stokes system in 2D exterior domains , Arch. Rational Mech. Anal. 233 (2019) 385– 407
work page 2019
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[5]
M. V. Korobkov, K. Pileckas, R. Russo , On the steady Navier–Stokes equations in 2D exterior domains , J. Differential Equations 269 (2020) 1796–1828
work page 2020
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[9]
J. W. Milnor , Topology from the differentiable viewpoint, based on notes by David W. W eaver, University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville, V A , 1965. ix+65 pp
work page 1965
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[10]
G. Seregin, L. Silvestre, V. ˇSver´ak, A. Zlato ˇs, On divergence-free drifts , J. Differ. Equ. 252, (2012), 505–540. (H. Kozono) Department of Mathematics, F aculty of Science and Engineering, W aseda University, Tokyo 169–8555, Japan, Mathematical Research C enter for Co-creative Society, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8578, Japan Email address , H. Kozon...
work page 2012
discussion (0)
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