Global existence of near-affine solutions to the compressible Euler equations
Abstract
We establish global existence of solutions to the compressible Euler equations, in the case that a finite volume of ideal gas expands into vacuum. Vacuum states can occur with either smooth or singular sound speed, the latter corresponding to the so-called physical vacuum singularity when the enthalpy vanishes on the vacuum wave front like the distance function. In this instance, the Euler equations lose hyperbolicity and form a degenerate system of conservation laws, for which a local existence theory has only recently been developed. Sideris found a class of expanding finite degree-of-freedom global-in-time affine solutions, obtained by solving nonlinear ODEs. In three space dimensions, the stability of these affine solutions, and hence global existence of solutions, was established by Hadzi\'c \& Jang with the pressure-density relation p = γ with the constraint that 1< γ 53 . They asked if a different approach could go beyond the γ > 53 threshold. We provide an affirmative answer to their question, and prove stability of affine flows and global existence for all γ >1, thus also establishing global existence for the shallow water equations when γ=2.
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