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  SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITIES | 
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| November 4, 2025 | 
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 7. Christian Klingenberg  8. Petronela Radu  9. Erwin Suazo  10. Elizabeth Thoren  11. Vlad Vicol  Inelastic Boltzmann Equation: Existence and uniqueness theorem for granular and dilute materials. by Ricardo Alonso The University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station, C1200, Austin, Texas 78712. The Cauchy problem for the inelastic Boltzmann equation is studied 
              for small data. Existence and uniqueness of mild and weak solutions 
              is obtained for sufficiently small data that lies in the space of 
              functions bounded by Maxwellians. The technique used to derive the 
              result is the well known iteration process of Kaniel & Shinbrot. Existence, Uniqueness and Blow-Up of Solutions 
              to Wave Equations with Supercritical Boundary/Interior Sources and 
              Damping We consider finite energy solutions of a wave equation with supercritical 
              nonlinear sources and nonlinear damping. A distinct feature of the 
              model under consideration is the presence of the double interaction 
              of source and damping, both in the interior of the domain and on 
              the boundary. Moreover, we consider nonlinear sources on the boundary 
              driven by Neumann boundary conditions. Since Lopatinski condition 
              fails to hold (unless the dim( W) = 1), the analysis of the nonlinearities 
              supported on the boundary, within the framework of weak solutions, 
              is a rather subtle issue and involves strong interaction between 
              the source and the damping. We provide positive answers to the questions 
              of local existence and uniqueness of weak solutions and moreover 
              we give complete and sharp description of parameters corresponding 
              to global existence and blow-up of solutions in finite time. Multiscale dynamics of 2D rotational compressible 
              Euler equations: an analytical approach. We study the 2D rotational compressible Euler equations with two independent parameters: the Rossby number t for rotational forcing and the Froude/Mach number s for pressure forcing. The competition of these two forces leads to a newly found parameter d = ts-2 that serves as a characteristic scale separating two major dynamics regimes: d << 1 for the strong rotation regime ([1]) and d >> 1 ([2]) for the mid/weak rotation regime. Our results reveal, in an analytic level, the stabilizing effect of rotation and the dispersive effect of pressure when these singular forces interact with the inherent nonlinearity of Euler dynamics. The understanding of such interaction is essential to the analysis/simulation of rotating dynamics, primarily to geophysical flows. Our results are consistent with geophysical observations of e.g. Near Inertial Oscillation and nonlinear Rossby adjustment. The analytical novelty relies on several approximation and associated error estimates. Differing from existing literature, our approach imposes algebraic constraint not on individual parameters t and s, but on their relative strength d. In the d << 1 regime, we utilize the method of iterative approximation, starting with the pressureless rotational Euler equations ([3]). The resulting approximation yields a periodic-in-time, fast rotating flow that reflects the domination of rotation in a nonlinear fashion. On the other hand, for d >> 1, we combine an invariant-based nonlinear wave analysis with Strichartz type estimates to reveal an approximate incompressible flow. This approach, free of Fourier analysis, has the potential to be extended to e.g. domains with nontrivial geometry. References Back to home page A Linear Schrodinger Formulation of (d+1)-Dimensional 
              Bianchi I Scalar Field Cosmology Various authors such as J. Lidsey, T. Christodoulakis, T. Grammenos, 
              C. Helias, P. Kevrekidis, G. Papadopoulos and F. Williams are known 
              to have formulated equivalent versions of the 3+1-dimensional Einstein's 
              field equations in terms of a so-called generalized Ermakov-Milne-Pinney 
              (EMP) differential equation. This reformulation provides an alternate 
              method for acquiring exact solutions to the field equations, and 
              has been accomplished within the frameworks of FRLW and some Bianchi 
              universe models. Further inspired by an EMP-Schrödinger correspondence 
              as noted by J. Lidsey, the author has recently published a linear 
              Schrödinger version of the Bianchi I scalar field cosmology. 
              This model has now been extended to an arbitrary number of dimensions, 
              and will be presented here. Existence and stability of waves in combustion 
              of high density liquid fuels I will discuss the stability of traveling waves for a model that 
              describes combustion of high density liquid fuels. The stability 
              analysis is performed for a parameter regime when the spectral information 
              is not definitive. It is shown that the wave is orbitally stable 
              with respect to a carefully chosen exponentially weighted norm. Scattering For the Focusing 2D Quintic Nonlinear 
              Schrödinger Equation Back to home page Computing turbulence flows using subgrid 
              scale modeling We have a new numerical method to compute turbulence flows arising 
              in astrophysical applications. The idea is to combine subgrid scale 
              modeling with adaptive mesh refinement. This has been implemented 
              into the cosmological code called ENZO. Wave equations with variable coefficients 
              and space dependent damping Damped wave equations with variable coefficients can be seen as 
              models of either hyperbolic diffusion or wave propagation under 
              the action of friction forces in a heterogeneous medium. We establish 
              decay rates for the energy and the L2 norm of the solution by employing 
              a strengthened multiplier method. The central piece in the proof 
              is an approximating profile constructed from a special subsolution 
              of a related elliptic problem. Decay rates for higher energies are 
              obtained by following an approach due to Nakao. Evolution operator for a one-dimensional 
              Schrodinger equation with a time dependent Hamiltonian. We propose an explicit construction of the fundamental solutions 
              to the one-dimensional Schrodinger equation with a particular linear 
              time-dependent Hamiltonian such that the sum of the order of derivative 
              and the degree of polynomial in the respective coefficient equals 
              two. For some special choice of coefficients of the Hamiltonian 
              this system can be integrated and therefore the fundamental solution 
              has an explicit form. Applications to physics are outlined. Linear instability criteria for Euler's 
              equation: two classes of perturbations One criteria for linear instability of a steady flow of an ideal incompressible fluid involves computing the essential spectral radius of the associated evolution operator for the linear perturbation about the steady equilibrium. This quantity is known to be equal to a Lyapunov type exponent associated with the equilibrium flow. In this work, the essential spectral radius of the linear evolution operator is investigated in the invariant subspace corresponding to the perturbations preserving the topology of the vortex lines and the associated factor space. 
 The Radius of Analyticity of Solutions to 
              the Three-Dimensional Euler Equations We address the problem of analyticity and Gevrey-regularity of smooth solutions u of the incompressible Euler equations. If the initial datum is real-analytic, the solution remains real-analytic as long as ?0t ??u(·, s)?L8 ds < 8 (cf. Bardos and Benachour). In the periodic case, using a Fourier method, we obtain a lower bound on the uniform radius of space analyticity which depends algebraically on exp?0t ??u(·, s)?L8ds. In particular, we positively answer a question posed by Levermore and Oliver. 
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