Date
Mon, 28 Feb 2022
Time
15:30 - 16:30
Location
L3
Speaker
DAN CRISAN
Organisation
(Imperial College, London)

Modern atmospheric and ocean science require sophisticated geophysical fluid dynamics models. Among them, stochastic partial

differential equations (SPDEs) have become increasingly relevant. The stochasticity in such models can account for the effect

of the unresolved scales (stochastic parametrizations), model uncertainty, unspecified boundary condition, etc. Whilst there is an

extensive SPDE literature, most of it covers models with unrealistic noise terms, making them un-applicable to

geophysical fluid dynamics modelling. There are nevertheless notable exceptions: a number of individual SPDEs with specific forms

and noise structure have been introduced and analysed, each of which with bespoke methodology and painstakingly hard arguments.

In this talk I will present a criterion for the existence of a unique maximal strong solution for nonlinear SPDEs. The work

is inspired by the abstract criterion of Kato and Lai [1984] valid for nonlinear PDEs. The criterion is designed to fit viscous fluid

dynamics models with Stochastic Advection by Lie Transport (SALT) as introduced in Holm [2015]. As an immediate application, I show that 

the incompressible SALT 3D Navier-Stokes equation on a bounded domain has a unique maximal solution.

 

This is joint work with Oana Lang, Daniel Goodair and Romeo Mensah and it is partially supported by European Research Council (ERC)

Synergy project Stochastic Transport in the Upper Ocean Dynamics (https://www.imperial.ac.uk/ocean-dynamics-synergy/

Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Last updated on 03 Apr 2022 01:32.