International audienceWe study a nonlocal version of the one-phase Stefan problem which develops mushy regions, even if they were not present initially, a model which can be of interest at the mesoscopic scale. The equation involves a convolution with a compactly supported kernel. The created mushy regions have the size of the support of this kernel. If the kernel is suitably rescaled, such regions disappear and the solution converges to the solution of the usual local version of the one-phase Stefan problem. We prove that the model is well posed, and give several qualitative properties. In particular, the long-time behavior is identified by means of a nonlocal mesa solving an obstacle problem
We provide existence of a unique smooth solution for a class of one- and two-phase Stefan problems w...
The classical Stefan problem for freezing (or melting) a sphere is usually treated by assuming that ...
The classical Stefan problem for freezing (or melting) a sphere is usually treated by assuming that ...
We study a nonlocal version of the two-phase Stefan problem, which models a phase transition problem...
The Stefan problem, involving the tracking of an evolving phase-change front, is the prototypical ex...
The Stefan problem, involving the tracking of an evolving phase-change front, is the prototypical ex...
Abstract. We study a nonlocal version of the two-phase Stefan problem, which models a phase transiti...
Abstract. We study a nonlocal version of the two-phase Stefan problem, which models a phase transiti...
13301甲第4720号博士(理学)金沢大学博士論文要旨Abstract 以下に掲載予定:Discrete and Continuous Dynamical Systems - Series S 20...
summary:We prove that solutions to the two-phase Stefan problem defined on a sequence of spatial dom...
We treat two related moving boundary problems. The first is the ill-posed Stefan problem for meltin...
We treat two related moving boundary problems. The first is the ill-posed Stefan problem for meltin...
The Stefan problem is coupled with a spatially inhomogeneous and anisotropic Gibbs-Thomson condition...
We treat two related moving boundary problems. The first is the ill-posed Stefan problem for meltin...
We treat two related moving boundary problems. The first is the ill-posed Stefan problem for meltin...
We provide existence of a unique smooth solution for a class of one- and two-phase Stefan problems w...
The classical Stefan problem for freezing (or melting) a sphere is usually treated by assuming that ...
The classical Stefan problem for freezing (or melting) a sphere is usually treated by assuming that ...
We study a nonlocal version of the two-phase Stefan problem, which models a phase transition problem...
The Stefan problem, involving the tracking of an evolving phase-change front, is the prototypical ex...
The Stefan problem, involving the tracking of an evolving phase-change front, is the prototypical ex...
Abstract. We study a nonlocal version of the two-phase Stefan problem, which models a phase transiti...
Abstract. We study a nonlocal version of the two-phase Stefan problem, which models a phase transiti...
13301甲第4720号博士(理学)金沢大学博士論文要旨Abstract 以下に掲載予定:Discrete and Continuous Dynamical Systems - Series S 20...
summary:We prove that solutions to the two-phase Stefan problem defined on a sequence of spatial dom...
We treat two related moving boundary problems. The first is the ill-posed Stefan problem for meltin...
We treat two related moving boundary problems. The first is the ill-posed Stefan problem for meltin...
The Stefan problem is coupled with a spatially inhomogeneous and anisotropic Gibbs-Thomson condition...
We treat two related moving boundary problems. The first is the ill-posed Stefan problem for meltin...
We treat two related moving boundary problems. The first is the ill-posed Stefan problem for meltin...
We provide existence of a unique smooth solution for a class of one- and two-phase Stefan problems w...
The classical Stefan problem for freezing (or melting) a sphere is usually treated by assuming that ...
The classical Stefan problem for freezing (or melting) a sphere is usually treated by assuming that ...