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Mathematical Research Letters

Volume 11, Issue 4, July 2004  pp. 519-528.

The inviscid limit for two-dimensional incompressible fluids with unbounded vorticity

Authors James P. Kelliher
Author institution: University of Texas, Austin

Summary:  In \cite{C1996}, Chemin shows that solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations in $\R^2$ for an incompressible fluid whose initial vorticity lies in $L^2 \cap L^\iny$ converge in the zero-viscosity limit in the $L^2$--norm to a solution of the Euler equations, convergence being uniform over any finite time interval. In \cite{Y1995}, Yudovich assumes an initial vorticity lying in $L^p$ for all $p \ge p_0$, and establishes the uniqueness of solutions to the Euler equations for an incompressible fluid in a bounded domain of $\R^n$, assuming a particular bound on the growth of the $L^p$--norm of the initial vorticity as $p$ grows large. We combine these two approaches to establish, in $\R^2$, the uniqueness of solutions to the Euler equations and the same zero-viscosity convergence as Chemin, but under Yudovich's assumptions on the vorticity with $p_0 = 2$. The resulting bounded rate of convergence can be arbitrarily slow as a function of the viscosity $\nu$.


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