Winding for Wave Maps

Max Engelstein

25-Aug-2020, 17:00-18:00 (4 years ago)

Abstract: Wave maps are harmonic maps from a Lorentzian domain to a Riemannian target. Like solutions to many energy critical PDE, wave maps can develop singularities where the energy concentrates on arbitrary small scales but the norm stays bounded. Zooming in on these singularities yields a harmonic map (called a soliton or bubble) in the weak limit. One fundamental question is whether this weak limit is unique, that is to say, whether different bubbles may appear as the limit of different sequences of rescalings.

We show by example that uniqueness may not hold if the target manifold is not analytic.  Our construction is heavily inspired by Peter Topping's analogous example of a ``winding" bubble in harmonic map heat flow. However, the Hamiltonian nature of the wave maps will occasionally necessitate different arguments.  This is joint work with Dana Mendelson (U Chicago).

Mathematics

Audience: researchers in the topic


Online Seminar "Geometric Analysis"

Series comments: We discuss recent trends related to geometric analysis in a broad sense. The general idea is to solve geometric problems by means of advanced tools in analysis. We will include a wide range of topics such as geometric flows, curvature functionals, discrete differential geometry, and numerical simulation.

Registration and links to videos available at blatt.sbg.ac.at/onlineseminar.php

Organizers: Simon Blatt*, Philipp Reiter*, Armin Schikorra*, Guofang Wang
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