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About fifteen years ago, Patrick Gérard and I introduced the cubic Szegö equation$$\begin{aligned}i \partial_{t} u & =\Pi\left(|u|^{2} u\right), \quad u=u(x, t), \quad x \in \mathbb{T}, t \in \mathbb{R} \\u(x, 0) & =u_{0}(x) .\end{aligned}$$Here $\Pi$ denotes the Szegö projector which maps $L^{2}(\mathbb{T})$-functions into the Hardy space of $L^{2}(\mathbb{T})$-traces of holomorphic functions in the unit disc. It turned out that the dynamics of this equation were unexpected. This motivated us to try to understand whether the cubic Szegö equation is an isolated phenomenon or not. This talk is part of this project.
We consider a family of perturbations of the cubic Szegö equation and look for their traveling waves. Let us recall that traveling waves are particular solutions of the form$$u(x, t)=\mathrm{e}^{-i \omega t} u_{0}\left(\mathrm{e}^{-i c t} x\right), \quad \omega, c \in \mathbb{R}$$We will explain how the spectral analysis of some operators allows to characterize them.
From joint works with Patrick Gérard.[-]
About fifteen years ago, Patrick Gérard and I introduced the cubic Szegö equation$$\begin{aligned}i \partial_{t} u & =\Pi\left(|u|^{2} u\right), \quad u=u(x, t), \quad x \in \mathbb{T}, t \in \mathbb{R} \\u(x, 0) & =u_{0}(x) .\end{aligned}$$Here $\Pi$ denotes the Szegö projector which maps $L^{2}(\mathbb{T})$-functions into the Hardy space of $L^{2}(\mathbb{T})$-traces of holomorphic functions in the unit disc. It turned out that the dynamics of ...[+]

35B05 ; 35B65 ; 47B35 ; 37K15

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The supercooled Stefan problem - Shkolnikov, Mykhaylo (Author of the conference) | CIRM H

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We will consider the supercooled Stefan problem, which captures the freezing of a supercooled liquid, in one space dimension. A probabilistic reformulation of the problem allows to define global solutions, even in the presence of blow-ups of the freezing rate. We will provide a complete description of such solutions, by relating the temperature distribution in the liquid to the regularity of the ice growth process. The latter is shown to transition between (i) continuous differentiability, (ii) Holder continuity, and (iii) discontinuity. In particular, in the second regime we rediscover the square root behavior of the growth process pointed out by Stefan in his seminal paper [Ste89] from 1889 for the ordinary Stefan problem. In our second main theorem, we will establish the uniqueness of the global solutions, a first result of this kind in the context of growth processes with singular self-excitation when blow-ups are present. Based on joint work with Francois Delarue and Sergey Nadtochiy.[-]
We will consider the supercooled Stefan problem, which captures the freezing of a supercooled liquid, in one space dimension. A probabilistic reformulation of the problem allows to define global solutions, even in the presence of blow-ups of the freezing rate. We will provide a complete description of such solutions, by relating the temperature distribution in the liquid to the regularity of the ice growth process. The latter is shown to ...[+]

80A22 ; 35B44 ; 60H30 ; 35B05

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