Abstract

We are interested in understanding the dynamics of dissipative partial differential equations on unbounded spatial domains. We consider systems for which the energy density $$e \ge 0$$ satisfies an evolution law of the form $$\partial _t e = \mathrm{div}_x f - d$$ , where $$-f$$ is the energy flux and $$d \ge 0$$ the energy dissipation rate. We also suppose that $$|f|^2 \le b(e)d$$ for some nonnegative function $$b$$ . Under these assumptions we establish simple and universal bounds on the time-integrated energy flux, which in turn allow us to estimate the amount of energy that is dissipated in a given domain over a long interval of time. In low space dimensions $$N \le 2$$ , we deduce that any relatively compact trajectory converges on average to the set of equilibria, in a sense that we quantify precisely. As an application, we consider the incompressible Navier–Stokes equation in the infinite cylinder $${\mathbb {R}}\times \mathbb {T}$$ , and for solutions that are merely bounded we prove that the vorticity converges uniformly to zero on large subdomains, if we disregard a small subset of the time interval.

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