Large-time behavior of solutions of parabolic equations on the real line with convergent initial data III:unstable limit at infinity (2112.11160v2)
Abstract: This is a continuation, and conclusion, of our study of bounded solutions $u$ of the semilinear parabolic equation $u_t=u_{xx}+f(u)$ on the real line whose initial data $u_0=u(\cdot,0)$ have finite limits $\theta\pm$ as $x\to\pm\infty$. We assume that $f$ is a locally Lipschitz function on $\mathbb{R}$ satisfying minor nondegeneracy conditions. Our goal is to describe the asymptotic behavior of $u(x,t)$ as $t\to\infty$. In the first two parts of this series we mainly considered the cases where either $\theta-\neq \theta+$; or $\theta\pm=\theta_0$ and $f(\theta_0)\ne0$; or else $\theta\pm=\theta_0$, $f(\theta_0)=0$, and $\theta_0$ is a stable equilibrium of the equation $\dot \xi=f(\xi)$. In all these cases we proved that the corresponding solution $u$ is quasiconvergent -- if bounded -- which is to say that all limit profiles of $u(\cdot,t)$ as $t\to\infty$ are steady states. The limit profiles, or accumulation points, are taken in $L\infty_{loc}(\mathbb{R})$. In the present paper, we take on the case that $\theta\pm=\theta_0$, $f(\theta_0)=0$, and $\theta_0$ is an unstable equilibrium of the equation $\dot \xi=f(\xi)$. Our earlier quasiconvergence theorem in this case involved some restrictive technical conditions on the solution, which we now remove. Our sole condition on $u(\cdot,t)$ is that it is nonoscillatory (has only finitely many critical points) at some $t\geq 0$. Since it is known that oscillatory bounded solutions are not always quasiconvergent, our result is nearly optimal.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.