Abstract

In the 1950s, Protter proposed multi-dimensional analogues of the classical Guderley–Morawetz problem for mixed-type hyperbolic-elliptic equations on the plane that models transonic flows in fluid dynamics. The multi-dimensional variants turn out to be different from the two-dimensional case and the situation there is still not clear. Here, we study Protter problems in the hyperbolic part of the domain. Unlike the planar analogues, the four-dimensional variant is not well-posed for classical solutions. The problem is not Fredholm — there is an infinite number of necessary conditions for classical solvability. Alternatively, the notion of a generalized solution that may have singularities was introduced. It is known that for smooth right-hand sides, the uniquely determined generalized solution may have a power-type growth at one boundary point. The singularity is isolated at the vertex of the boundary characteristic light cone and does not propagate along the cone. Here, we construct a new singular solution with an exponential growth at the point where the singularity appears.

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