McLean resonances and 3d spectral instability of Stokes waves
Abstract
The spectral instability of traveling periodic water waves has been investigated for more than sixty years, since the seminal discovery of Benjamin and Feir. Despite an extensive literature, no rigorous theory has been available for arbitrary three-dimensional -- longitudinal and transverse -- perturbations. We establish the first rigorous description of the 3d unstable spectrum of small-amplitude gravity Stokes waves in deep water in a full neighborhood of the McLean resonant curves. Our results reveal that the Benjamin-Feir instability and the first longitudinal high-frequency isola originate from the same resonant interaction, hidden in the purely longitudinal setting. The dominant instabilities emerge for Fourier-Bloch parameters near the origin, corresponding to the 3d Benjamin-Feir modulational instability. Our approach provides quantitative bounds for the real parts of the unstable eigenvalues and establishes a computable necessary and sufficient criterion for the onset of instability near arbitrary high-frequency McLean curves. These results are enabled by three key innovations: (i) a Kato perturbative analysis allowing Lipschitz-type singularities of the linearized operator with respect to the Fourier-Bloch parameters; (ii) a polar-analytic KAM-type decoupling isolating the unstable eigenvalue pairs near the origin; and (iii) an analytic continuation argument in full neighborhoods of the McLean curves. A primary challenge is to establish fine regularity properties for the Dirichlet-Neumann operator conjugated via the Fourier-Bloch transform.
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