Submitted:
15 May 2026
Posted:
21 May 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
Nomenclature (Core Symbols)
| —Thermodynamic entropy-production density. |
| —Dyadic shell energy. |
| —Sobolev-weighted shell energy. |
| —Helmholtz free-energy density. |
| —Total thermodynamic free-energy functional. |
| —Nonlinear thermo–acoustic contribution. |
| —Dissipative thermo–acoustic nonlinear component. |
| —Entropy-skew nonlinear transport component. |
| —Parabolic cylinder centered at |
| —Shellwise perturbative remainder. |
| —Absolute temperature. |
| —Shellwise nonlinear transfer. |
| —High–High shellwise nonlinear transfer. |
| —Maximal existence time. |
| —Thermo–acoustic state vector. |
| —Limiting thermo–acoustic profile. |
| —Velocity field. |
| —Thermo–acoustic entropy-variable state vector. |
| —Normalized blow-up sequence. |
| —Nonlinear ancient thermo–acoustic profile. |
| —Spatial variable. |
| —Space–time variable. |
| —Littlewood–Paley dyadic localization operator. |
| —ε-regularity parameter. |
| —Higher-integrability exponent. |
| —Thermal conductivity coefficient. |
| —Second viscosity coefficient. |
| —Shear viscosity coefficient. |
| —Spatial gradient. |
| —Smooth cutoff function. |
| —Mass density. |
| —Viscous stress tensor. |
| —Logarithmic temperature variable. |
| —Entropy-variable temperature transformation. |
| —Sobolev space of order |
| —Lebesgue space. |
| —Local Lebesgue space. |
| —Relative thermodynamic free-energy density. |
| —Relative thermodynamic dissipation functional. |
| —Total relative free energy. |
Chapter 1. Introduction
1.1. Background and Motivation
1.2. Fourier–Triadic Transfer and the Role of High–High Interactions
- density transport,
- pressure–acoustic coupling,
- temperature evolution,
- entropy production,
- and thermodynamic diffusion.
1.3. Main Idea of the Present Paper
- identify the critical nonlinear concentration mechanism through Fourier–triadic localization,
- pass to normalized nonlinear thermo–acoustic ancient limits,
- establish thermodynamic rigidity of the limiting system,
- derive ε-regularity through contradiction,
- exclude persistent critical concentration,
- and obtain global strong regularity through continuation.
1.4. Main Results
- nonlinear transfer localization,
- exclusion of critical concentration,
- weak–strong stability,
- and long-time dissipative relaxation
1.5. Organization of the Paper
Chapter 3. Fourier–Triadic Structure in the Compressible System
3.1. Fourier Representation of the Compressible Momentum Equation
- density–velocity coupling,
- pressure–acoustic interaction,
- thermodynamic transport,
- and temperature-dependent diffusion.
3.2. Effective Triadic Interaction Structure
3.3. Dyadic Decomposition
3.4. Shellwise Energy Balance
3.5. Low–Low and Low–High Perturbative Interactions
3.6. High–High Same-Scale Interactions
3.7. Compressible Remainders: Pressure, Density, and Commutators
3.8. Role of the Structural Reduction
Chapter 4. Thermodynamic Closure and Entropy–Variable Reformulation
4.1. From Momentum Transfer to Thermodynamic Variables
4.2. Thermo–Acoustic Form of the NSF System
- is the thermo–acoustic symmetrizer,
- are transport matrices,
- is the thermodynamic diffusion tensor,
- and contains lower-order nonlinear coupling terms.
4.3. Entropy Production and Local Coercivity
4.4. Weak Reverse Hölder Reduction
4.5. Non-Circularity of the Local Framework
- global Sobolev closure,
- Lipschitz continuation criteria,
- Campanato decay assumptions,
- or global regularity estimates.
- local coercivity,
- compactness,
- entropy-skew structure,
- and localized thermodynamic dissipation.
Chapter 5. Nonlinear Ancient Limits and Thermodynamic Rigidity
5.1. Critical Blow-Up Normalization
5.2. Nonlinear Thermo–Acoustic Ancient Profile
5.3. Entropy–Variable Decomposition of the Nonlinearity
5.4. Exact Local Thermodynamic Identity
5.5. Gradient Entropy Subsolution Inequality
5.6. Liouville Classification of Critical Ancient Profiles
Chapter 6. ε-Regularity and Exclusion of Critical Concentration
6.1. Blow-Up Compactness and Nontriviality
6.2. Thermodynamic Meyers Regularity
6.3. Defect Closure under Normalization
6.4. Thermo–Acoustic ε-Regularity
6.5. Exclusion of Persistent Critical Entropy Concentration
Chapter 7. Global Strong Regularity
7.1. Critical Concentration Criterion
7.2. Continuation Breakdown Implies Critical Concentration
7.3. Main Theorem: Global Strong Regularity under Thermodynamic Closure
7.4. Non-Circularity of the Proof
Chapter 8. Weak–Strong Uniqueness and Relative Entropy Stability
8.1. Relative Thermodynamic Free Energy
8.2. Relative Free-Energy Coercivity
8.3. Relative Energy Inequality
8.4. Control of Remainder Terms
8.5. Weak–Strong Uniqueness
8.6. Entropy Stability around the Strong Solution
- a stability functional,
- a nonlinear contraction mechanism,
- and a thermodynamic dissipation measure.
Chapter 9. Long-Time Stability and Thermodynamic Relaxation
9.1. Thermodynamic Equilibrium State
9.2. Relative Free Energy Around Equilibrium
9.3. Dissipation–Free-Energy Inequality
9.4. Long-Time Convergence
9.5. Interpretation
- viscous dissipation,
- heat conduction,
- entropy production,
- and thermo–acoustic transport.
- vanishing entropy production,
- conservation of mass,
- conservation of total energy,
- and thermodynamic free-energy minimization.
- Fourier–triadic localization identifies the dynamically relevant nonlinear amplification regime,
- thermodynamic rigidity excludes persistent critical concentration,
- weak–strong uniqueness stabilizes the regular evolution,
- and thermodynamic dissipation drives long-time relaxation toward equilibrium.
Chapter 10. Discussion
10.1. What Has Been Proved
- Fourier–triadic nonlinear localization,
- thermo–acoustic entropy structure,
- nonlinear ancient-limit rigidity,
- ε-regularity,
- global strong regularity,
- weak–strong uniqueness,
- and long-time thermodynamic relaxation.
- weak–strong uniqueness,
- relative entropy stability,
- and long-time relaxation toward thermodynamic equilibrium.
- nonlinear amplification,
- concentration exclusion,
- stability,
- and asymptotic relaxation
10.2. Why Compressibility and Thermodynamics Matter
- entropy production,
- heat conduction,
- thermo–acoustic coupling,
- and thermodynamic free-energy decay.
10.3. Relation to Incompressible Navier–Stokes
10.4. Limitations and Future Work
- thermodynamic rigidity for nonperiodic geometries,
- interaction between turbulence intermittency and entropy production,
- thermo–acoustic concentration structures near vacuum,
- and possible thermodynamic formulations of incompressible singularity problems.
Chapter 11. Conclusions
Appendix A. Technical Fourier and Commutator Estimates
- Fourier–triadic localization,
- shellwise decomposition,
- perturbative interaction control,
- compressible commutator bounds,
- and same-scale High–High localization.
A.1. Littlewood–Paley Estimates
- Low–Low interactions,
- Low–High interactions,
- and High–High interactions.
A.2. Compressible Commutator Estimates
- density transport,
- pressure coupling,
- thermo–acoustic coefficients,
- and entropy-variable nonlinearities.
A.3. High–High Same-Scale Localization Estimates
Appendix B. Compactness and Parabolic Estimates
- parabolic compactness,
- localized energy estimates,
- gradient control,
- and higher integrability.
B.1. Aubin–Lions Compactness
- is compact,
- is continuous.
B.2. Caccioppoli Inequality
B.3. Mean-Value Estimate
B.4. Meyers-Type Estimate
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