Special Session 111: Evolution Equations and Operator Semigroups: Theory and Applications

Perturbations of non-autonomous second-order abstract Cauchy problems

Christian Budde
University of the Free State
So Africa
Co-Author(s):    Christian Seifert
Abstract:
We present time-dependent perturbations of second-order non-autonomous abstract Cauchy problems associated to a family of operators with constant domain. We make use of the equivalence to a first-order non-autonomous abstract Cauchy problem in a product space, which we elaborate in full detail. As an application we provide a perturbed non-autonomous wave equation.

Generation theorems via affine resolvent decomposition

Adam Gregosiewicz
Lublin University of Technology
Poland
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
We present a simple method for proving generation results for strongly continuous semigroups and cosine functions via resolvent decomposition. Let \(A\) be a closed linear operator on a Banach space and suppose that the domain of \(A\) consists of elements \(f\) satisfying a boundary/transmission condition of the form \(\Phi f = 0\) for a linear functional \(\Phi\). In many concrete problems, \(\Phi\) is a finite sum of simpler functionals, say \(\Phi = \sum \phi\). Under a mild nondegeneracy condition on the kernel of \(\lambda - A\), we show that for every \(\lambda\) in the resolvent sets of all \(A_{|\ker \phi}\) we have \[ (\lambda - A)^{-1} = \sum_{\phi} \alpha_{\lambda,\phi} (\lambda - A_{|\ker \phi})^{-1} \] with \(\alpha_{\lambda,\phi} = \phi h / \Phi h\), where \(h\) is a fixed nonzero element of the kernel of \(\lambda - A\). That is, the resolvent of A is an affine (or even convex) combination of simpler resolvents. Combining this identity with standard criteria (the Hille--Yosida theorem for semigroups and the Sova--Da Prato--Giusti theorem for cosine functions) yields a family of generation theorems: if each \(A_{\phi}\) is a generator and the coefficients \(\alpha_{\lambda,\phi}\) satisfy natural regularity conditions, then \(A\) is a generator as well. As applications, we obtain generation results beyond the purely Markov/Feller setting and prove the existence of cosine functions associated with skew and snapping out Brownian motions on star graphs. Moreover, we show that skew Brownian motion can be approximated by snapping out Brownian motion, illustrating how resolvent decompositions translate structural boundary information into concrete evolution families. {\bfseries References} [1] A.~Gregosiewicz, \emph{Resolvent decomposition with applications to semigroups and cosine functions}, Math. Ann. \textbf{391} (2025), 4011--4035.

Weak hypocoercivity for operator semigroups

Martin Grothaus
RPTU University Kaiserslautern-Landau
Germany
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
Motivated by problems from Industrial Mathematics we further developed the concepts of hypocoercivity. The original concepts needed Poincar\`{e} inequalities and were applied to equations in linear finite dimensional spaces. Meanwhile we can treat equations in manifolds or even infinite dimensional spaces. The condition giving micro- and macroscopic coercivity we could relax from Poincar\`{e} to weak Poincar\`{e} inequalities. In this talk an overview and many examples are given.

General concept of allmost periodicity and applications to functional differential equations

Jaqueline Mesquita
Universidade Estadual de Campinas
Brazil
Co-Author(s):    M. Bohner and R. Murakami
Abstract:
We introduce a general notion of almost periodic functions that extends the classical definition while encompassing a much broader class of functions. This new framework allows us to generalize several results, including nonperiodic averaging principles. We then apply these results to functional differential equations.

Heat Kernels and Geometry on Metric Graphs

Delio Mugnolo
FernUniversität in Hagen
Germany
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
The heat content of a domain, originally explored by Davies and van den Berg, is defined via the heat kernel of the heat equation. Much like the ground state energy, its significance lies in its ability to encode fundamental geometric properties. In this talk, we extend these concepts to the setting of metric graphs and establish new geometric bounds for this quantity. By employing graph surgery and more refined analytical tools, we demonstrate how these bounds facilitate a novel approach to geometric inverse problems on graphs.

Two-Dimensional Keller-Segel-Navier-Stokes System of Potential Type

Gabriela Planas
Universidade Estadual de Campinas
Brazil
Co-Author(s):    D. Barbosa (Brazil) and F. Guill\`en-Gonz\`alez (Spain)
Abstract:
In this talk, we study a Keller-Segel-Navier-Stokes system posed on a two-dimensional domain, describing the interaction of a cell density with two chemical signals: an attractive signal that is consumed by the cells and a repulsive signal that is produced by them. The model incorporates general consumption and production rates together with a generalized logistic growth law for the cell population. We impose no-flux boundary conditions on the cell density and chemical concentrations, along with Dirichlet boundary conditions for the fluid velocity field. Under suitable conditions linking the chemotactic sensitivities, attraction and consumption rates, and the strength of logistic competition, we prove the existence of global classical solutions to the system.

Two Approximation Schemes for Walsh`s Spider Process

Elzbieta Ratajczyk
Lublin University of Technology
Poland
Co-Author(s):    Adam Bobrowski
Abstract:
Walsh`s spider process is a diffusion on an infinite star-shaped graph $S_k$ consisting of a single vertex connected to $k$ half-lines. Away from the origin, it behaves as a one-dimensional Brownian motion along each ray, but exhibits a peculiar behavior at the origin. Roughly speaking, when the process reaches the central vertex, it instantaneously chooses an outgoing edge and starts a standard Brownian excursion on the $i$-th edge with probability $\alpha_i$. We present two different approximation results for Walsh`s spider. First, we derive the process as the diffusive scaling limit of a deterministic transport model with random velocity exchanges. Deterministic motions on $k$ copies of $S_k$ are perturbed by two stochastic mechanisms: interactions at interfaces located at the graphs` centers, and random jumps between different copies of the same edge. Second, we show that Walsh`s spider process can be approximated by a snapping-out Brownian motion with large permeability coefficients. This yields an interpretation of Walsh`s spider as a Brownian motion perturbed by the trace of a semi-permeable membrane located at the graph`s center.