Abstract

We prove the nonlinear stability of the planar viscous shock up to a time-dependent shift for the three-dimensional (3D) compressible Navier–Stokes equations under the generic perturbations, in particular, without zero mass conditions. Moreover, the time-dependent shift function keeps the shock profile shape time-asymptotically. Our stability result is unconditional for the weak planar Navier–Stokes shock. Our proof is motivated by the a -contraction method (a kind of weighted L^{2} -relative entropy method) with time-dependent shift for the stability of viscous shock in the one-dimensional (1D) case. Instead of the classical anti-derivative techniques, we perform the stability analysis of the planar Navier–Stokes shock in the original H^{2} -perturbation framework and therefore zero mass conditions are not necessarily needed, which, in turn, brings out the essential difficulties due to the compressibility of viscous shock. Furthermore, compared with 1D case, there are additional difficulties coming from the wave propagations along the multi-dimensional transverse directions and their interactions with the viscous shock. To overcome these difficulties, a multi-dimensional version of the sharp weighted Poincaré inequality, a -contraction techniques with time-dependent shift, and some essential physical structures of the multi-dimen­sional Navier–Stokes system are fully used.

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