Sharp threshold for a one-dimensional thin film equation in the supercritical case
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 17:23 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
For the one-dimensional thin film equation with supercritical repulsion, the steady state U_* sets a sharp threshold: larger L^{m+1} norm and lower free energy than U_* imply finite-time blow-up.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In the supercritical case 3 < m < ∞ for the one-dimensional thin film equation combining fourth-order repulsion with m-order aggregation, there exists a unique nonnegative radially decreasing steady state U_* that coincides with the extremal function of the sharp Sz.-Nagy inequality and is simultaneously the global minimizer of the free energy. Using this variational characterization, finite-time blow-up occurs for all initial data whose free energy lies below the positive threshold F(U_*), provided the L^{m+1}-norm exceeds that of U_*. Conversely, if the L^{m+1}-norm is below that of U_*, the solution exists globally and its second moment diverges as t approaches infinity.
What carries the argument
The steady state U_*, which is the unique nonnegative radially decreasing solution that is both the global minimizer of the free energy and the extremal function for the sharp Sz.-Nagy inequality.
If this is right
- Finite-time blow-up occurs for initial data satisfying F(u0) < F(U_*) and ||u0||_{L^{m+1}} > ||U_*||_{L^{m+1}}.
- Global existence holds when ||u0||_{L^{m+1}} < ||U_*||_{L^{m+1}}, with the second moment diverging to infinity.
- The variational characterization of U_* directly determines the dynamical threshold between blow-up and spreading.
- The new criterion applies to a wider class of initial data than the earlier condition of negative free energy alone.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Numerical integration of the equation could test whether the predicted blow-up times match the L^{m+1}-norm comparison.
- The same energy-norm threshold construction might be examined in aggregation-diffusion models on the line with different diffusion orders.
- In the global-existence regime the diverging second moment suggests quantitative spreading rates that could be derived from the same variational structure.
Load-bearing premise
There exists a unique nonnegative radially decreasing steady state U_* that is simultaneously the extremal function of the sharp Sz.-Nagy inequality and the global minimizer of the free energy.
What would settle it
An initial datum whose L^{m+1} norm exceeds that of U_* and whose free energy lies below F(U_*) but whose solution remains global and bounded for all time would falsify the blow-up claim.
read the original abstract
We study a one-dimensional thin film equation combining competitive effects of aggregation and repulsion, where repulsion is modeled by fourth-order diffusion and aggregation by backward second-order degenerate diffusion with exponent $m>0$. Under natural regularity constraints, we prove that for every $m>0$, there exists a unique (up to the mass-critical case $m=3$) nonnegative, radially decreasing steady state $U_*$ which coincides with the extremal function of the sharp Sz.-Nagy inequality and is simultaneously the global minimizer of the free energy. Using this variational characterization in the supercritical regime $3<m<\infty$, we show that finite-time blow-up occurs for all initial data whose initial free energy lies below the positive threshold $F(U_*)$, provided the $L^{m+1}$-norm of the initial datum exceeds that of $U_*$. Conversely, if the $L^{m+1}$-norm is below that of $U_*$, the solution exists globally and its second moment diverges as $t\to\infty$. This sharp criterion significantly extends the previously known blow-up condition requiring negative free energy to a much wider class of initial data (see \cite{BP00}). Our results identify the steady state $U_*$ as the critical pivot linking variational structure to dynamical behavior, and provide a constructive method to determine blow-up versus global existence via an explicit $L^{m+1}$-norm comparison.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript studies a one-dimensional thin film equation with competing fourth-order repulsion and m-dependent aggregation. It asserts that for every m>0 (except the mass-critical case m=3) there exists a unique nonnegative radially decreasing steady state U_* that is simultaneously the extremal function of the sharp Sz.-Nagy inequality and the global minimizer of the free-energy functional F. In the supercritical regime 3<m<∞ the paper proves finite-time blow-up whenever F(u_0)<F(U_*) and ||u_0||_{m+1}>||U_*||_{m+1}, while global existence with diverging second moment holds when the L^{m+1} norm lies below that of U_*. The result is presented as a sharp extension of the classical negative-energy blow-up criterion.
Significance. If the variational identification of U_* is free of internal contradiction, the work would supply a precise, constructive threshold that substantially enlarges the set of initial data for which blow-up can be predicted, moving beyond the negative-energy regime to include certain positive-energy data. The explicit linkage between the Sz.-Nagy extremal and the dynamical pivot is a potentially valuable contribution to the analysis of aggregation-diffusion equations.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract (and the statement of the main dynamical result): the claim that U_* is the global minimizer of F is inconsistent with the asserted blow-up criterion for data satisfying F(u_0)<F(U_*). A global minimizer would imply F(u)≥F(U_*) for every admissible u, rendering the set {u_0 : F(u_0)<F(U_*)} empty and the new threshold vacuous. This directly contradicts the abstract's assertion that the criterion extends the negative-energy condition of BP00 to a wider class. The identification of U_* as global minimizer is load-bearing for the sharp-threshold claim.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The phrase 'natural regularity constraints' is used without explicit definition; a short clarification or reference to the precise function space would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading of our manuscript and for highlighting the inconsistency in our description of the variational properties of the steady state U_*. We fully agree that the current claim leads to a logical contradiction with the proposed blow-up criterion and will make the necessary revisions to resolve this issue.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract (and the statement of the main dynamical result): the claim that U_* is the global minimizer of F is inconsistent with the asserted blow-up criterion for data satisfying F(u_0)<F(U_*). A global minimizer would imply F(u)≥F(U_*) for every admissible u, rendering the set {u_0 : F(u_0)<F(U_*)} empty and the new threshold vacuous. This directly contradicts the abstract's assertion that the criterion extends the negative-energy condition of BP00 to a wider class. The identification of U_* as global minimizer is load-bearing for the sharp-threshold claim.
Authors: We appreciate the referee's identification of this important point. We acknowledge that asserting U_* to be the global minimizer of the free energy F is inconsistent with the existence of initial data for which F(u_0) < F(U_*), as a global minimizer would satisfy F(u) ≥ F(U_*) for all admissible u. This was an inadvertent error in the manuscript. In reality, for the supercritical range 3 < m < ∞, the free-energy functional is unbounded from below, which is consistent with the possibility of finite-time blow-up. The role of U_* in our analysis is as the unique nonnegative, radially decreasing steady state that also serves as the extremal function for the sharp Sz.-Nagy inequality. This variational characterization via the Sz.-Nagy inequality is what enables the sharp threshold in terms of the L^{m+1} norm. The proofs of the dynamical results do not rely on U_* being a global minimizer but rather on comparison principles and virial-type identities that use the specific profile of U_*. We will revise the abstract and all relevant statements in the manuscript to remove the claim that U_* is the global minimizer and to accurately describe its properties as the Sz.-Nagy extremal and the unique radial steady state. This revision will not impact the validity of the main results. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation relies on proved variational characterization and external inequalities
full rationale
The paper states it proves existence and uniqueness of U_* as the radially decreasing steady state that coincides with the Sz.-Nagy extremal and is the global minimizer of the free energy F. It then invokes this characterization to obtain the sharp blow-up threshold F(u_0) < F(U_*) when ||u_0||_{m+1} > ||U_*||_{m+1} in the supercritical regime. No step reduces the dynamical conclusion to a tautological restatement of the inputs by construction, nor does any load-bearing premise collapse to an unverified self-citation or fitted parameter renamed as prediction. The Sz.-Nagy identification and energy minimization are presented as proved results (drawing on the known inequality), after which the threshold follows from the variational structure. The logical tension between a global minimizer and the existence of data with strictly lower energy is a correctness issue, not a circularity in the derivation chain. The result is therefore self-contained against the stated external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption There exists a unique nonnegative radially decreasing steady state U_* that is the global minimizer of the free energy and the extremal function of the sharp Sz.-Nagy inequality.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
U_* is the unique global minimizer of F(u) over Y_{M,P^*} ... inf F(u) = F(U_*) = (m-3)/(3(m+1)) P_*^{m+1} >0 (Theorem 1.3(i))
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
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discussion (0)
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