Solving the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky-Burgers equation until the 6p-th dimension: the Brownian-time paradigm
Abstract
We use our earlier Brownian-time framework to formulate and establish global uniqueness and local-in-time existence of the Burgers incarnation of the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky PDE on R+×Rd, in the class of time-continuous L2p-valued solutions, p1, for every d<6p. We assume neither space compactness, nor spatial coordinates dependence, nor smallness of initial data. The surprising discovery of the 6p-th dimension bound, even for local solutions, is revealed by our approach and the Brownian-time kernel -- the Brownian average of an angled d-dimensional Schr\"odinger propagator -- at its heart. We use this kernel to give a systematic approach, for all dimensions simultaneously, including a novel formulation -- even in the well-known d=1 case -- of the KS equation. This yields the estimates leading to this article's conclusions. We achieve the stated results by fusing some of our earlier Brownian-time stochastic processes constructions and ideas -- encoded in the aforementioned kernel -- with analytic ones, including complex and harmonic analysis; by employing suitable N-ball approximations together with fixed point theory; and by an adaptation of the stochastic analytic stopping-time technique to our deterministic setting. Using a separate strategy, that is also built on our Brownian-time paradigm, we treat the global wellposedness of the multidimensional KS equation in a followup upcoming article. This work also serves as a template for another forthcoming article in which we prove similar results for the time-fractional Burgers equation in multidimensional space.
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