Abstract

In acoustics, higher-order-in-time equations arise when taking into account a class of thermal relaxation laws in the modeling of sound wave propagation. In this work, we analyze initial boundary value problems for a family of such equations and determine the behavior of solutions as the relaxation time vanishes. In particular, we allow the leading term to be of fractional type. The studied model can be viewed as a gen-eralization of the well-established (fractional) Moore–Gibson–Thompson equation with three, in general nonlocal, convolution terms involving two different kernels. The interplay of these convolutions will influence the uniform analysis and the lim-iting procedure. To unify the theoretical treatment of this class of local and nonlocal higher-order equations, we relax the classical assumption on the leading-term kernel and consider it to be a Radon measure. After establishing uniform well-posedness with respect to the relaxation time of the considered general model, we connect it, through a delicate singular limit procedure, to fractional second-order models of linear acoustics.

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