In my PDE class we are following Evans PDE book, we were reading about Regularity of weak solutions

Oberhangaps5z

Oberhangaps5z

Answered question

2022-04-10

In my PDE class we are following Evans PDE book, we were reading about Regularity of weak solutions for Hyperbolic equations, more specific in the proof theorem 5 section 7.2.3., the author states that we have
d d t ( u ~ m L 2 ( U ) 2 + A [ u ~ m , u ~ m ] ) C ( u ~ m L 2 ( U ) 2 + A [ u ~ m , u ~ m ] + f L 2 ( U ) 2 )
where u ~ m = u m , also the estimate
u m H 2 ( U ) 2 C ( f L 2 ( U ) 2 + u m L 2 ( U ) 2 + u m L 2 ( U ) 2 )
Evans says that using this last inequality in the first and aplying Gronwall's Inequality we deduce that
sup 0 t T ( u m ( t ) H 2 ( U ) 2 + u m ( t ) H 1 ( U ) 2 + u m ( t ) L 2 ( U ) 2 ) C ( f H 1 ( 0 , T ; L 2 ( U ) ) 2 + g H 2 ( U ) 2 + h H 1 ( U ) 2 )
My problem is that I don't understand how this last expression is obtained, can anyone help me?

Answer & Explanation

Mackenzie Zimmerman

Mackenzie Zimmerman

Beginner2022-04-11Added 15 answers

Step 1
I am dropping the subscript m which is used to indicate approximating solutions.
The first inequality (with the time derivative on the left) comes from considering the pde that is satisfied by u ~ = u and applying the usual energy estimate. Apply a Gronwall argument here to obtain an estimate
sup t ( u ~ ( t ) L 2 2 + A ( u ~ ( t ) , u ~ ( t ) ) ) C ( u ~ ( 0 ) L 2 2 + A ( u ~ ( 0 ) , u ~ ( 0 ) ) + 0 T f L 2 2 )
You read off from the pde for u ~ what u ~ ( 0 ) and u ~ ( 0 ) must be. This implies estimates for
sup t ( u t t ( t ) L 2 + u t ( t ) H 1 )
since the form A is (essentially) coercive.
The second inequality follows from the pde itself plus elliptic regularity theory for the operator L. Just write L u = u t t + f and use an estimate like
u H 2 C ( L u L 2 + u L 2 )
which surely appears in an earlier chapter of the book.
Since you already have an estimate for u t t L 2 , the desired estimate now can be derived. Just keep track of where norms of g and h enter the estimates.

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