Classification of Blow-ups and Free Boundaries of Solutions to Unstable Free Boundary Problems (1510.03872v1)
Abstract: In general, solutions $u$ to [ \Delta u(\mathbf{x})=f(\mathbf{x})\chi_{{u>\psi}} ] are not $C{1,1}$, even for $f$ smooth and $\psi(\mathbf{x})\equiv0$. Points around which $u$ is not $C{1,1}$ are called singular points, and the set of all such points, the singular set. In this article we analyze blow-ups, the free boundary $\partial{u>\psi}$, and the singular set close to singular points $\mathbf{x}{0}=(x{0},y{0},z{0})$ in $\mathbb{R}{3}$. We show that blow-ups of the form [ \lim_{j\to\infty}\frac{u(r_{j}\cdot+\mathbf{x}{0})}{|u|{L{\infty}(B{r_{j}}(\mathbf{x}{0}))}}, ] $r_{j}\to0{+}$ are unique, the free boundary $\partial{u>\psi}$ is up to rotations close to the surfaces $(x-x{0}){2}+(y-y{0}){2}=2(z-z{0}){2}$ or $(x-x{0}){2}=(z-z{0}){2}$, and that singular points are either isolated or contained in a $C{1}$ curve. The methods of the proofs are based on projecting the solutions $u$ on the space of harmonic two-homogeneous polynomials.