Abstracts
November 27 & December 3, 2002
Jim Colliander, University of Toronto
Well-posedness for quasilinear (uniformly) parabolic PDE
This talk will describe a proof of well-posedness for the initial-boundary
value problem for quasilinear parabolic PDE. The discussion will combine
ideas presented in the books "Linear and Quasilinear Equations
of Parabolic Type" by Ladyzhenskaya - Solonnikov - Uralceva and
"Elliptic PDE of 2nd Order" by Gilbarg-Trudinger.
January 29, 2003
Fridolin Ting, University of Toronto.
Asymptotic behavior (near finite extinction time) for the fast diffusion
equation with exponent m=(N-2)/(N+2), N >2
I will summarize the results obtained by Del Pino and Saez (2001). They
proved that for continuous, positive and sufficiently nice decaying
initial data, the solution goes asymptotically (as t approaches vanishing
time) to a self similar solution parameterized by \lambda > 0 and
x in R^N. Techniques involved are similar to those used by Ye (1984)
on global existence and convergence of Yamabe flow.
Supporting papers:
M. Del Pino & M. Saez, "On the Extinction Profile for Solutions
of u_t = \Laplace u^(N-2)/(N+2)", Indiana University Mathematics
Journal, Vol. 50, No. 1 (2001)
R. Ye, "Global existence and convergence of Yamabe Flow",
Journal of Differential Geometry, 39, (1994), 35-50
February 5 & 12, 2003
Jim Colliander, University of Toronto.
Variations of a theme by Morawetz
The identification of monotone-in-time quantities underpins some of
the basic insights into the long-time behavior on nonlinear Schrodinger
evolutions. For example, in the focusing setting, the variance identity
implies a monotone behavior implying the existence of blow-up solutions.
In the defocusing case, Morawetz identities provide spacetime norm bounds
implying scattering behavior. This talk describes a unified approach
to obtaining monotone-in-time quantities for certain NLS evolutions,
generalizing these two classic examples. A scattering result for the
3d cubic defocusing case will also be discussed. This talk describes
joint work with M. Keel, G. Staffilani, H. Takaoka and T. Tao
February 26, 2003
Robert Jerrard, University of Toronto
Dynamics of Ginzburg-Landau vortices: general background
In this talk I will describe some results from the calculus of variations
that describe the structure and stability proposerties of Ginzburg-Landau
vortices. These results are useful for studying questions about dynamics.
This talk will be aimed at non-experts.
Reference:
The Jacobian and the Ginzburg-Landau energy. Calc. Var. Partial Differential
Equations 14 (2002), no. 2, 151--191.
March 5, 2003
Robert Jerrard, University of Toronto
Dynamics of Ginzburg-Landau vortices II
In this talk I will sketch the derivation of dynamical laws for Ginzburg-Landau
vortices for several different types of evolution equation, and I will
discuss general stability results that are useful in actual proofs of
all these results.
March 12, 2003
Robert Jerrard, University of Toronto
Long time asymptotics for Ginzburg-Landau heat flow
In this talk i will go over a paper that describes the long-time limit
of finite-energy solutions of the Ginzburg-Landau heat flow on the plane.
References:
(1) Bauman, Patricia(1-PURD); Chen, Chao-Nien(1-IN); Phillips, Daniel(1-PURD);
Sternberg, Peter(1-IN) Vortex annihilation in nonlinear heat flow for
Ginzburg-Landau systems. (English. English summary) European J. Appl.
Math. 6 (1995), no. 2, 115--126. 35Q99 (82D55)
(2) Kalantarov, V. K.; Lady\v zenskaja, O. A. Stabilization of the solutions
of a certain class of quasilinear parabolic equations as $t\rightarrow
\infty $. (Russian) Sibirsk. Mat. Zh. 19 (1978), no. 5, 1043--1052,
1214. 35K60 (35B40)
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