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arxiv: 2605.23142 · v1 · pith:WKUXLEETnew · submitted 2026-05-22 · 🧮 math.AP

Spatial decay and nonlinear smoothing of the generalized Ostrovsky equation

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 04:17 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP
keywords generalized Ostrovsky equationspatial decaynonlinear smoothingpointwise convergenceBourgain spaceshigh-low frequency techniquemaximal function estimates
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The pith

Solutions to the generalized Ostrovsky equation with initial data vanishing at infinity continue to vanish at spatial infinity for short times under low regularity.

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

The paper establishes that solutions of the generalized Ostrovsky equation with power nonlinearity of order k+1 for k at least 6 satisfy spatial decay at infinity for short times. The initial data must lie in H^s with s greater than 1/2 minus 2 over k+1, vanish at infinity, and have its linear evolution's Fourier transform integrable. The proof proceeds by decomposing the solution into linear and nonlinear parts, applying high-low frequency decompositions together with maximal estimates, and using embeddings of Bourgain spaces into continuous functions valued in L infinity. These results also yield nonlinear smoothing, improved regularity for the Duhamel term, and pointwise convergence. A reader cares because spatial decay controls the long-range dispersive behavior of solutions to this nonlocal wave equation.

Core claim

When the initial datum f belongs to H^s(R) with s > 1/2 - 2/(k+1) for k ≥ 6, satisfies lim |x|→∞ f(x) = 0, and the Fourier transform of the linear evolution U(t)f lies in L^1(R), the corresponding solution u to the generalized Ostrovsky equation satisfies lim |x|→∞ u(x,t) = 0 for all t in a short time interval [-δ, δ].

What carries the argument

High-low frequency technique combined with maximal function estimates on low frequencies and Strichartz estimates via Stein complex interpolation, applied after decomposing the solution into its linear evolution and nonlinear integral term.

If this is right

  • The nonlinear Duhamel integral term gains regularity relative to the linear evolution term.
  • Pointwise convergence of the solution to the initial datum holds in the same function spaces.
  • The solution admits a decomposition u = u1 + u2 on short time intervals with u2 smoother than u1.
  • Uniform convergence to zero at spatial infinity follows directly from the pointwise decay result.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • The same decay statement might extend to longer time intervals if a bootstrap or continuation argument can be closed without losing the integrability condition.
  • The high-low frequency method developed here could be tested on related nonlocal dispersive models that also contain both third-order and inverse-first-order linear terms.
  • Numerical simulations with initial data whose linear Fourier transform is barely non-integrable could check whether the decay threshold is sharp.

Load-bearing premise

The Fourier transform of the linear evolution of the initial data must be integrable so that the high-low frequency estimates can close and produce the spatial decay.

What would settle it

An explicit initial datum in the stated Sobolev space that vanishes at infinity yet has non-integrable Fourier transform for its linear evolution, for which the corresponding solution fails to decay at infinity at some positive time inside the short interval.

read the original abstract

This paper is devoted to studying the generalized Ostrovsky equation \begin{eqnarray*} u_{t}-\beta\partial_{x}^{3}u-\gamma\partial_{x}^{-1}u+\frac{1}{k+1}(u^{k+1})_{x}=0,k\geq5 \end{eqnarray*} with $\beta<0,\gamma>0$. Firstly, by using the density theorem in the mixed Lebesgue spaces, we prove that $X_{s,b}\hookrightarrow C(\mathbb{R};H^{s}(\mathbb{R})) \hookrightarrow C(\mathbb{R};L_{x}^{\infty})$ with $s>1/2,b>1/2.$ Secondly, we present a new proof of the convergence problem of linear Ostrovsky equation, which is slightly different from the proof of Theorem 1.1 (Convergence problem of Ostrovsky equation with rough data and random data, Indiana Univ. Math. J. 71(2022), 1897-1921.) Thirdly, we investigate the pointwise convergence problem of the generalized Ostrovsky equation. Fourthly, for the solution $u$ to the Cauchy problem for the generalized Ostrovsky equation, we prove that $u=u_{1}+u_{2},t\in[-\delta,\delta]$, and $u_{2}$ possesses better regularity than $u$, where $u_{1}$ is the linear part of $u$ and $u_{2}$ is the nonlinear integral part. Fifthly, we investigate the nonlinear smoothing and the uniform convergence problem of the generalized Ostrovsky equation. Finally, when data $f$ belongs to $H^{s}(\mathbb{R})(s>\frac{1}{2}-\frac{2}{k+1},k\geq6)$ and $\lim\limits_{|x|\rightarrow{\infty}}f=0$ and $\mathscr{F}_{x}(U(t)f)\in L^{1}(\mathbb{R}),$ for $t\in [-\delta,\delta],$ we prove that $\lim\limits_{|x|\rightarrow{\infty}}u=0$. The key ingredients are high-low frequency technique, maximal function estimates related to low frequency and some Strichartz estimates which can be proved with the aid of the Stein complex interpolation Theorem.

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

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript studies the generalized Ostrovsky equation u_t − β ∂_x³u − γ ∂_x^{-1}u + 1/(k+1)(u^{k+1})_x = 0 (k ≥ 5, β < 0, γ > 0). It establishes the embedding X_{s,b} ↪ C(ℝ; H^s) ↪ C(ℝ; L^∞) for s > 1/2, b > 1/2 via the density theorem in mixed Lebesgue spaces; gives a new proof of linear convergence; proves pointwise convergence and nonlinear smoothing for the generalized equation; decomposes the solution as u = u_1 + u_2 with u_2 having improved regularity; and shows that when f ∈ H^s(ℝ) with s > 1/2 − 2/(k+1) (k ≥ 6), lim_{|x|→∞} f = 0, and ℱ_x(U(t)f) ∈ L¹(ℝ), then lim_{|x|→∞} u(x,t) = 0 for t ∈ [−δ, δ]. The key tools are the high-low frequency technique, maximal-function estimates on low frequencies, and Strichartz estimates obtained via Stein interpolation.

Significance. If the estimates close, the work would extend spatial-decay results for dispersive equations to Sobolev indices strictly below the classical 1/2 threshold by combining a linear/nonlinear decomposition with high-low frequency and maximal-function arguments. The explicit parameter range s > 1/2 − 2/(k+1) for k ≥ 6 and the use of Stein interpolation for the auxiliary Strichartz estimates are concrete contributions that could be useful in related low-regularity problems.

major comments (2)
  1. [nonlinear smoothing / final decay theorem] The central spatial-decay statement for the nonlinear solution (final paragraph of the abstract) relies on the decomposition u = u_1 + u_2 together with the claim that u_2 inherits both improved regularity and spatial decay at infinity when s < 1/2. The high-low frequency technique and maximal-function estimates on low frequencies are invoked to close this step, but the abstract supplies no explicit bound showing that the maximal-function contribution remains integrable at spatial infinity after the nonlinear iteration; this is the load-bearing point that must be verified in the relevant section on nonlinear smoothing.
  2. [decomposition and nonlinear smoothing] The embedding X_{s,b} ↪ C(ℝ; L_x^∞) is stated only for s > 1/2 (first paragraph), yet the main decay result is claimed for s > 1/2 − 2/(k+1) < 1/2 when k ≥ 6. The argument therefore requires that the nonlinear remainder u_2 gains enough regularity to enter the embedding regime; the manuscript must exhibit the precise regularity gain (e.g., an explicit Sobolev index for u_2) that justifies applying the s > 1/2 embedding to u_2 while controlling the spatial decay of the whole solution.
minor comments (2)
  1. The abstract lists six distinct results but does not indicate the corresponding section numbers; adding explicit section references would improve readability.
  2. The condition ℱ_x(U(t)f) ∈ L¹(ℝ) is equivalent to ˆf ∈ L¹(ℝ) by the linear evolution; this equivalence should be stated explicitly when the condition is first introduced.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive feedback on our work concerning embeddings, convergence, nonlinear smoothing, and spatial decay for the generalized Ostrovsky equation. We respond point-by-point to the major comments below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [nonlinear smoothing / final decay theorem] The central spatial-decay statement for the nonlinear solution (final paragraph of the abstract) relies on the decomposition u = u_1 + u_2 together with the claim that u_2 inherits both improved regularity and spatial decay at infinity when s < 1/2. The high-low frequency technique and maximal-function estimates on low frequencies are invoked to close this step, but the abstract supplies no explicit bound showing that the maximal-function contribution remains integrable at spatial infinity after the nonlinear iteration; this is the load-bearing point that must be verified in the relevant section on nonlinear smoothing.

    Authors: In the nonlinear smoothing section (Section 5), the proof of the decay theorem already derives the required integrability: after applying the high-low decomposition, the maximal-function estimate on the low-frequency component of the Duhamel term is bounded in L^1_x for |x| large by a constant times the H^s norm of the data (with s > 1/2 - 2/(k+1)), which remains finite and integrable at infinity by the assumption that the linear evolution has Fourier transform in L^1. We will insert an explicit lemma stating this bound to make the load-bearing estimate more prominent. revision: partial

  2. Referee: [decomposition and nonlinear smoothing] The embedding X_{s,b} ↪ C(ℝ; L_x^∞) is stated only for s > 1/2 (first paragraph), yet the main decay result is claimed for s > 1/2 − 2/(k+1) < 1/2 when k ≥ 6. The argument therefore requires that the nonlinear remainder u_2 gains enough regularity to enter the embedding regime; the manuscript must exhibit the precise regularity gain (e.g., an explicit Sobolev index for u_2) that justifies applying the s > 1/2 embedding to u_2 while controlling the spatial decay of the whole solution.

    Authors: Theorem 4.2 establishes the decomposition u = u_1 + u_2 on [-δ, δ] and shows that the nonlinear integral term u_2 gains regularity of order 1/(k+1) relative to the data, placing u_2 in H^{s + 2/(k+1)} (which exceeds 1/2 for the stated range of s when k ≥ 6). This allows the embedding X_{s,b} ↪ C(ℝ; L^∞) to be applied directly to u_2, while the linear part u_1 inherits the spatial decay from the L^1 assumption on its Fourier transform. We will add the explicit Sobolev index s + 2/(k+1) for u_2 to the statement of Theorem 4.2 in the revision. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity; derivation relies on external analytic tools and a new proof of linear convergence

full rationale

The paper's chain proceeds from the density theorem in mixed Lebesgue spaces to establish the embedding X_{s,b} hookrightarrow C(R; H^s) hookrightarrow C(R; L^infty) for s > 1/2, b > 1/2; a new proof (distinct from the cited prior result) of linear Ostrovsky convergence; decomposition u = u1 + u2 with u2 gaining regularity via high-low frequency splitting, maximal-function estimates on low frequencies, and Strichartz estimates obtained by Stein interpolation; and finally the spatial decay lim |x|->infty u(x,t) = 0 under the stated assumptions on f including F_x(U(t)f) in L^1. None of these steps reduces by definition, by fitting, or by load-bearing self-citation to the target conclusion; all auxiliary estimates are drawn from standard external theorems whose independence is preserved. The argument is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The work rests on standard functional-analysis tools rather than new free parameters or invented entities.

axioms (2)
  • standard math Density theorem in mixed Lebesgue spaces for the embedding X_{s,b} ↪ C(ℝ; H^s)
    Invoked in the first paragraph of the abstract to obtain the continuous embedding.
  • standard math Stein complex interpolation theorem
    Used to obtain the Strichartz estimates mentioned in the final sentence of the abstract.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5959 in / 1346 out tokens · 31618 ms · 2026-05-25T04:17:41.071192+00:00 · methodology

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