Synopses & Reviews
The primary objective of this monograph is to develop an elementary and self-contained approach to the mathematical theory of a viscous, incompressible fluid in a domain of the Euclidean space, described by the equations of Navier-Stokes. Moreover, the theory is presented for completely general domains, in particular, for arbitrary unbounded, nonsmooth domains. Therefore, restriction was necessary to space dimensions two and three, which are also the most significant from a physical point of view. For mathematical generality, however, the linearized theory is expounded for general dimensions higher than one. Although the functional analytic approach developed here is, in principle, known to specialists, the present book fills a gap in the literature providing a systematic treatment of a subject that has been documented until now only in fragments. The book is mainly directed to students familiar with basic tools in Hilbert and Banach spaces. However, for the readers' convenience, some fundamental properties of, for example, Sobolev spaces, distributions and operators are collected in the first two chapters. - - - The book is written in a well arranged way, easy to survey and with utilization of the newest results. For its study, it is necessary to know only the basic functional analytic tools in Hilbert and Banach spaces. It is determined for an extensive circle of readers, from students up to experts in science and also for specialists in the field. (Zentralblatt MATH)
Review
From the reviews: "The book is well written and not unnecessarily wordy. There is an up-to-date bibliography and a nice index. ... a mathematician who wishes to know what the important issues concerning eq. (1) are and what has been achieved, would find this an excellent source. Equally, a mathematically-minded student, with a good grounding in analysis and who has decided to work in this area, or the teacher who wants to teach a course on this material would find this a valuable text." (P. N. Shankar,Current Science, Vol. 85 (2), July, 2003)
Review
From the reviews:"The book is well written and not unnecessarily wordy. There is an up-to-date bibliography and a nice index. ... a mathematician who wishes to know what the important issues concerning eq. (1) are and what has been achieved, would find this an excellent source. Equally, a mathematically-minded student, with a good grounding in analysis and who has decided to work in this area, or the teacher who wants to teach a course on this material would find this a valuable text." (P. N. Shankar,Current Science, Vol. 85 (2), July, 2003)
Synopsis
This book develops an elementary and self-contained approach to the mathematical theory of a viscous, incompressible fluid in a domain of the Euclidean space, described by the equations of Navier-Stokes.
Synopsis
The primary objective of this monograph is to develop an elementary and se- containedapproachtothemathematicaltheoryofaviscousincompressible?uid n in a domain ? of the Euclidean spaceR, described by the equations of Navier- Stokes. The book is mainly directed to students familiar with basic functional analytic tools in Hilbert and Banach spaces. However, for readers' convenience, in the ?rst two chapters we collect, without proof some fundamental properties of Sobolev spaces, distributions, operators, etc. Another important objective is to formulate the theory for a completely general domain ?. In particular, the theory applies to arbitrary unbounded, non-smooth domains. For this reason, in the nonlinear case, we have to restrict ourselves to space dimensions n=2,3 that are also most signi?cant from the physical point of view. For mathematical generality, we will develop the l- earized theory for all n? 2. Although the functional-analytic approach developed here is, in principle, known to specialists, its systematic treatment is not available, and even the diverseaspectsavailablearespreadoutintheliterature.However, theliterature is very wide, and I did not even try to include a full list of related papers, also because this could be confusing for the student. In this regard, I would like to apologize for not quoting all the works that, directly or indirectly, have inspired this monograph.
Synopsis
Preliminary Results.- The Stationary Navier-Stokes Equations.- The Linearized Nonstationary Theory.- The Full Nonlinear Navier-Stokes Equations.
About the Author
Hermann Sohr is professor of mathematics, especially mathematical fluid mechanics, at the University Paderborn, Germany.
Table of Contents
Preface.- I Introduction.- II Preliminary Results.- III The Stationary Navier-Stokes Equations.- IV The Linearized Nonstationary Theory.- V The Full Nonlinear Navier-Stokes Equations.- Bibliography.- Index.