posted on 2018-01-11, 09:10authored byAlexander N Gorban, Ilya Karlin
The problem of the derivation of hydrodynamics from the Boltzmann
equation and related dissipative systems is formulated as the problem
of a slow invariant manifold in the space of distributions. We review a few
instances where such hydrodynamic manifolds were found analytically both as
the result of summation of the Chapman–Enskog asymptotic expansion and by
the direct solution of the invariance equation. These model cases, comprising
Grad’s moment systems, both linear and nonlinear, are studied in depth in
order to gain understanding of what can be expected for the Boltzmann equation.
Particularly, the dispersive dominance and saturation of dissipation rate
of the exact hydrodynamics in the short-wave limit and the viscosity modification
at high divergence of the flow velocity are indicated as severe obstacles to
the resolution of Hilbert’s 6th Problem. Furthermore, we review the derivation
of the approximate hydrodynamic manifold for the Boltzmann equation using
Newton’s iteration and avoiding smallness parameters, and compare this to
the exact solutions. Additionally, we discuss the problem of projection of the
Boltzmann equation onto the approximate hydrodynamic invariant manifold
using entropy concepts. Finally, a set of hypotheses is put forward where we
describe open questions and set a horizon for what can be derived exactly or
proven about the hydrodynamic manifolds for the Boltzmann equation in the
future.
History
Citation
Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 2014, 51 (2), pp. 187-246
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Mathematics