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On the well-posedness of the incompressible porous media equation in Triebel-Lizorkin spaces

Abstract

In this paper, we prove the local well-posedness for the incompressible porous media equation in Triebel-Lizorkin spaces and obtain blow-up criterion of smooth solutions. The main tools we use are the Fourier localization technique and Bony’s paraproduct decomposition.

MSC:76S05, 76D03.

1 Introduction

In this paper, we are concerned with the incompressible porous media equation (IPM) in R d (d=2 or 3):

(IPM) { t θ + u θ = 0 , θ ( x , 0 ) = θ 0 , u = k ( p + g γ θ ) , div u = 0 ,
(1.1)

where x R d , t>0, θ is the liquid temperature, u is the liquid discharge, p is the scalar pressure, k is the matrix of position-independent medium permeabilities in the different directions, respectively, divided by the viscosity, g is the acceleration due to gravity, and γ R d is the last canonical vector e d . For simplicity, we only consider k=g=1.

By rewriting Darcy’s law we obtain the expression of velocity u only in terms of temperature θ[1, 2]. In the 2D case, thanks to the incompressibility, taking the curl operator first and the :=( x 2 , x 1 ) operator second on both sides of Darcy’ law, we have

Δu= ( x 1 θ)= ( x 1 x 2 θ , x 1 2 θ ) ,

thus the velocity u can be recovered as

u(x,t)= 1 2 π R 2 ln|xy| ( 2 θ y 2 y 1 ( y , t ) , 2 θ 2 y 1 ( y , t ) ) dy,x R 2 .

Through integration by parts we finally get

u(x,t)= 1 2 ( 0 , θ ( x , t ) ) + 1 2 π PV R 2 H(xy)θ(y,t)dy,x R 2 ,
(1.2)

where the kernel H() is defined by

H(x)= ( 2 x 1 x 2 | x | 4 , x 2 2 x 1 2 | x | 4 ) .

Similarly, in 3D case, applying the curl operator twice to Darcy’s law, we get

Δu= ( 1 3 θ , 2 3 θ , 1 2 θ + 2 2 θ ) ,

where i := x i , thus

u(x,t)= 2 3 ( 0 , 0 , θ ( x , t ) ) + 1 4 π PV R 3 K(xy)θ(y,t)dy,x R 3 ,
(1.3)

where

K(x)= ( 3 x 1 x 3 | x | 5 , 3 x 2 x 3 | x | 5 , 2 x 3 2 x 1 2 x 2 2 | x | 5 ) .

We observe that, in general, each coefficient of u(,t) (with t as parameter) is only the linear combination of the Calderoń-Zygmund singular integral (with the definition see the sequel) of θ and θ itself. We write the general version as

u:=T(θ)=C(θ)+S(θ),
(1.4)

where T=( T k ), C=( C k ), S=( S k ), 1kN are all operators mapping scalar functions to vector-valued functions and C k equals a constant multiplication operator whereas S k means a Calderón-Zygmund singular integral operator. Especially the corresponding specific forms in 2D or 3D are shown as (1.2) or (1.3).

We observe that the system (IPM) is not more than a transport equation with non-local divergence-free velocity field (the specific relationship between velocity and temperature as (1.4) shows). It shares many similarities with another flow model - the 2D dissipative quasi-geostrophic (QG) equation, which has been intensively studied by many authors [38]. From a mathematical point of view, the system (IPM) is somewhat a generalization of the (QG) equation. Very recently, the system (IPM) was introduced and investigated by Córdoba et al. In [2], they treated the (IMP) in 2D case and obtained the local existence and uniqueness in Hölder space C δ for 0<δ<1 by the particle-trajectory method and gave some blow-up criteria of smooth solutions. Recently, they proved non-uniqueness for weak solutions of (IPM) in [9]. For the dissipative system related (IPM), in [1], the authors obtained some results on strong solutions, weak solutions and attractors. For finite energy they obtained global existence and uniqueness in the subcritical and critical cases. In the supercritical case, they obtained local results in H s , s>(Nα)/2+1 and extended to be global under a small condition θ 0 H s cν, for s>N/2+1, where c is a small fixed constant.

Recently, Chae studied the local well-posedness and blow-up criterion for the incompressible Euler equations [10, 11], and quasi-geostrophic equations [12] in Triebel-Lizorkin spaces. As is well known, Triebel-Lizorkin spaces are the unification of several classical function spaces such as Lebegue spaces L p ( R d ), Sobolev spaces H p s ( R d ), Lipschitz spaces C s ( R d ), and so on. In [10], the author first used the Littlewood-Paley operator to localize the Euler equation to the frequency annulus {|ξ| 2 j }, then obtained an integral representation of the frequency-localized solution on the Lagrangian coordinates by introducing a family of particle-trajectory mappings { X j (α,t)} defined by

{ t X j ( α , t ) = ( S j 2 v ) ( X j ( α , t ) , t ) , X j ( α , 0 ) = α ,
(1.5)

where v is a divergence-free velocity field and S j 2 is a frequency projection to the ball {|ξ| 2 j } (see Section 2). He also used the following equivalent relation:

( j Z 2 j s q | Δ j v ( X j ( α , t ) ) | q ) 1 q L p ( d α ) ( j Z 2 j s q | Δ j v ( x ) | q ) 1 q L p ( d x ) = v F ˙ p , q s
(1.6)

to estimate the frequency-localized solutions of the Euler equations or quasi-geostrophic equations in Triebel-Lizorkin spaces. However, it seems difficult to give a strict proof for the above equivalent relation (1.6) and its related counterpart due to the lack of a uniform change of the coordinates independent of j. To avoid this trouble, Chen et al.[13] introduced a particle trajectory mapping X(α,t) independent of j defined by

{ t X ( α , t ) = v ( X ( α , t ) , t ) , X ( α , 0 ) = α ,

and then established a new commutator estimate to obtain the local well-posedness of the ideal MHD equations in the Triebel-Lizorkin spaces.

In this paper, we will adapt the method of Chen et al.[13] to establish the local well-posedness for the incompressible porous media equation (1.1) and to obtain a blow-up criterion of smooth solutions in the framework of Triebel-Lizorkin spaces.

Now we state our result as follows.

Theorem 1.1 (i) Local-in-time existence. Lets> d p +1, 1<p,q<. Assume that θ 0 F p , q s ( R d ), then there existsT=T( θ 0 F p , q s )such that (1.1) has a unique solutionθC([0,T]; F p , q s ( R d ))Lip([0,T]; F p , q s 1 ( R d )).

  1. (ii)

    Blow-up criterion. The local-in-time solutionθC([0,T]; F p , q s )constructed in (i) blows up at T >Tin F p , q s , i.e.

    lim sup t T θ ( t ) F p , q s =+, T <,

if and only if

0 T θ ( t ) F ˙ , 1 dt=+.

2 Preliminaries

Let B={ξ R d ,|ξ| 4 3 } and C={ξ R d , 3 4 |ξ| 8 3 }. Choose two nonnegative smooth radial functions χ, φ supported, respectively, in and such that

χ(ξ)+ j 0 φ ( 2 j ξ ) =1,ξ R d , j Z φ ( 2 j ξ ) =1,ξ R d {0}.

We denote φ j (ξ)=φ( 2 j ξ), h= F 1 φ and h ˜ = F 1 χ. Then the dyadic blocks Δ j and S j can be defined as follows:

Δ j f = φ ( 2 j D ) f = 2 j d R d h ( 2 j y ) f ( x y ) d y , S j f = k j 1 Δ k f = χ ( 2 j D ) f = 2 j d R d h ˜ ( 2 j y ) f ( x y ) d y .

Formally, Δ j = S j + 1 S j is a frequency projection to the annulus {|ξ| 2 j }, and S j is a frequency projection to the ball {|ξ| 2 j }. One easily verifies that with our choice of φ

Δ j Δ k f0if |jk|2and Δ j ( S k 1 f Δ k f)0if |jk|5.
(2.1)

With the introduction of Δ j and S j , let us recall the definition of the Triebel-Lizorkin space. Let sR, (p,q)[1,)×[1,], the homogeneous Triebel-Lizorkin space F ˙ p , q s is defined by

F ˙ p , q s = { f Z ( R d ) ; f F ˙ p , q s < } ,

where

f F ˙ p , q s = { ( j Z 2 j s q | Δ j f | q ) 1 q L p , for  1 q < , sup j Z ( 2 j s | Δ j f | ) L p , for  q = ,

and Z ( R d ) denotes the dual space of Z( R d )={fS( R d ); α f ˆ (0)=0;α N d  multi-index} and can be identified by the quotient space of S /P with the polynomials space .

For s>0 and (p,q)[1,)×[1,], we define the inhomogeneous Triebel-Lizorkin space F p , q s as follows:

F p , q s = { f S ( R d ) ; f F p , q s < } ,

where

f F p , q s = f L p + f F ˙ p , q s .

We refer to [14] for more details.

Lemma 2.1 (Bernstein’s inequality) [15]

LetkN. There exists a constant C independent of f and j such that, for all1pq, the following inequalities hold:

supp f ˆ { | ξ | 2 j } sup | α | = k α f L q C 2 j k + j d ( 1 p 1 q ) f L p , supp f ˆ { | ξ | 2 j } f L p C sup | α | = k 2 j k α f L p .

Lemma 2.2[14]

For anykN, there exists a constant C k such that the following inequality holds:

C k 1 k f F ˙ p , q s f F ˙ p , q s + k C k k f F ˙ p , q s .

Proposition 2.1[10]

Lets>0, (p,q)(1,)×(1,], orp=q=, then there exists a constant C such that

f g F ˙ p , q s C ( f L g F ˙ p , q s + g L f F ˙ p , q s ) , f g F p , q s C ( f L g F p , q s + g L f F p , q s ) .

Proposition 2.2[10]

Lets>d/2withp,q[1,]. Supposef F p , q s , then there exists a constant C such that the following inequality holds:

f L C ( 1 + f F ˙ , s ( log + f F p , q s + 1 ) ) .

Proposition 2.3[13]

Let(p,q)(1,)×(1,], orp=q=, and f be a solenoidal vector field. Then fors>0

2 k s ( [ f , Δ k ] g ) q ( Z ) L p ( f L g F ˙ p , q s + g L f F ˙ p , q s ) ,
(2.2)

or for s>1

2 k s ( [ f , Δ k ] g ) q ( Z ) p ( f L g F ˙ p , q s + g L f F ˙ p , q s ) .
(2.3)

The classical Calderón-Zygmund singular integrals are operators of the form

T c z f(x):=PV R N Ω ( y ) | y | N f(xy)dy= lim ϵ 0 | y | > ϵ Ω ( y ) | y | N f(xy)dy,

where Ω is defined on the unit sphere of R N , S N 1 , and is integrable with zero average and where y := y | y | S N 1 . Clearly, the definition is meaningful for Schwartz functions. Moreover if Ω C 1 ( S N 1 ), T c z is L p bounded, 1<p<.

The general version (1.4) of the relationship between u and θ is in fact ensured by the following result (see e.g.[16]).

Lemma 2.3 Letm C ( R N {0})be a homogeneous function of degree 0, and T m be the corresponding multiplier operator defined by ( T m f ) =m f ˆ , then there existaCandΩ C ( S N 1 )with zero average such that for any Schwartz function f,

T m f=af+PV Ω ( x ) | x | N f.

Remark 2.1 Since Δv=( 1 N θ,, N 1 N θ, 1 2 θ++ N 1 2 θ), the Fourier multiplier of the operator is rather clear. In fact, each component of its multiplier is the linear combination of the term like ξ i ξ j | ξ | 2 , i,j{1,2,,N}, which of course belongs to C ( R N {0}) and is homogeneous of degree 0.

3 Proof of Theorem 1.1

We divide the proof of Theorem 1.1 into several steps.

Step 1. A priori estimates.

Taking the operation Δ k on both sides of the first equation of (1.1), we have

t Δ k θ+u Δ k θ=u Δ k θ Δ k (uθ)[u, Δ k ]θ.
(3.1)

Let X(α,t) be the solution of the following ordinary differential equations:

{ t X ( α , t ) = u ( X ( α , t ) , t ) , X ( α , 0 ) = α .
(3.2)

Then it follows from (3.1) that

d d t Δ k θ ( X ( α , t ) , t ) =[u, Δ k ]θ ( X ( α , t ) , t ) ,
(3.3)

which implies that

| Δ k θ ( X ( α , t ) , t ) | | Δ k θ 0 ( α ) | + 0 t | ( [ u , Δ k ] θ ) ( X ( α , τ ) , τ ) | dτ.
(3.4)

Multiplying 2 k s , taking the q (Z) norm on both sides of (3.4), we get by using the Minkowski inequality

( k | 2 k s Δ k θ ( X ( α , t ) , t ) | q ) 1 q ( k | 2 k s Δ k θ 0 ( α ) | q ) 1 q + 0 t ( k | 2 k s ( [ u , Δ k ] θ ) ( X ( α , τ ) , τ ) | q ) 1 q d τ .
(3.5)

Next, taking the L p norm with respect to α R d on both sides of (3.5), we get by using the Minkowski inequality that

( R d | ( k | 2 k s Δ k θ ( X ( α , t ) , t ) | q ) 1 q | p d α ) 1 p θ 0 F ˙ p , q s + 0 t ( R d | ( k | 2 k s ( [ u , Δ k ] θ ) ( X ( α , τ ) , τ ) | q ) 1 q | p d α ) 1 p d τ .
(3.6)

Using the fact that αX(α,t) is a volume-preserving diffeomorphism due to divu=0, we get from (3.6) that

θ ( t ) F ˙ p , q s θ 0 F ˙ p , q s + 0 t 2 k s ( [ u , Δ k ] θ ) q ( k Z ) L p dτ.
(3.7)

Thanks to Proposition 2.3, the last term on the right side of (3.7) is dominated by

0 t ( u L θ F ˙ p , q s + θ L u F ˙ p , q s ) dτ,
(3.8)

and thus

θ ( t ) F ˙ p , q s θ 0 F ˙ p , q s + 0 t ( u L + θ L ) θ F ˙ p , q s dτ,
(3.9)

where we used (1.4) and the boundedness of the Calderón-Zygmund singular integral operator on F ˙ p , q s .

Now from (1.1) we have immediately

θ ( t ) L p = θ 0 L p
(3.10)

for all 1p, since div u=0. Summing up (3.9) and (3.10) yields

θ ( t ) F p , q s θ 0 F p , q s + 0 t ( u L + θ L ) θ F p , q s dτ,
(3.11)

which together with the Gronwall inequality gives

θ ( t ) F p , q s θ 0 F p , q s exp ( C 0 t ( u L + θ L ) d τ ) .
(3.12)

Step 2. Approximate solutions and uniform estimates.

We construct the approximate solutions of (1.1). Define the sequence { θ ( n ) , u ( n ) } N 0 = N { 0 } by solving the following systems:

{ t θ ( n + 1 ) + u ( n ) θ ( n + 1 ) = 0 , u ( n ) = C ( θ ( n ) ) + S ( θ ( n ) ) , div u ( n ) = 0 , θ ( n + 1 ) | t = 0 = S n + 2 θ 0 .
(3.13)

We set ( θ ( 0 ) , u ( 0 ) )=(0,0) and let X ( n ) (α,t) be the solutions of the following ordinary differential equations:

{ t X ( n ) ( α , t ) = u ( n ) ( X ( n ) ( α , t ) , t ) , X ( n ) ( α , 0 ) = α
(3.14)

for each nN. Then, following the same procedure of estimate leading to (3.11), we obtain

θ ( n + 1 ) ( t ) F p , q s S n + 2 θ 0 F p , q s + 0 t ( u ( n ) L θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s + θ ( n + 1 ) L u ( n ) F p , q s ) d τ θ 0 F p , q s + 0 t ( u ( n ) F p , q s 1 θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s + θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s 1 u ( n ) F p , q s ) d τ θ 0 F p , q s + 0 t θ ( n ) F p , q s θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s d τ ,
(3.15)

where we used the fact that S n + 2 θ 0 θ 0 , Sobolev embedding theorem F p , q s 1 L for s1>d/p, (1.4) and the boundedness of the Calderón-Zygmund singular integral operator on F p , q s . Equation (3.15) together with the Gronwall inequality implies that

θ ( n + 1 ) ( t ) F p , q s θ 0 F p , q s exp ( C 0 t θ ( n ) F p , q s d τ ) ,
(3.16)

for some C>0 independent of n. Thus, if we choose T 0 = T 0 ( θ 0 F p , q s )>0 such that

T 0 θ 0 F p , q s 1 2 C ln2,

we have, for any n N 0 ,

sup 0 t T 0 θ ( n + 1 ) ( t ) F p , q s 2C θ 0 F p , q s ,
(3.17)

by the standard induction arguments. Then, θ ( n + 1 ) C([0, T 0 ]; F p , q s ( R d )). Moreover, it follows from Proposition 2.1 that

t θ ( n + 1 ) ( t ) F p , q s 1 = u ( n ) θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s 1 C ( u ( n ) L θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s 1 + u ( n ) F p , q s 1 θ ( n + 1 ) L ) C θ ( n ) F p , q s 1 θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s

by Sobolev embedding and the boundedness of the Calderón-Zygmund singular integral operator on F p , q s , and then

sup 0 t T 0 t θ ( n + 1 ) ( t ) F p , q s C θ 0 F p , q s 2 ,
(3.18)

which implies that t θ ( n + 1 ) C([0, T 0 ]; F p , q s 1 ( R d )). This together with (3.17) gives the uniform estimate of θ ( n ) (x,t) in n.

Step 3. Existence.

We will show that there exists a positive time T 1 ( T 0 ) independent of n such that θ ( n ) and u ( n ) are Cauchy sequences in X T s 1 C([0, T 1 ]; F p , q s 1 ). For this purpose, we set

δ θ ( n + 1 ) = θ ( n + 1 ) θ ( n ) ,δ u ( n + 1 ) = u ( n + 1 ) u ( n ) .

Then, it follows that δ θ ( n + 1 ) satisfies the equations

{ t δ θ ( n + 1 ) + u ( n ) δ θ ( n + 1 ) = δ u ( n ) θ ( n ) , δ θ ( n + 1 ) | t = 0 = Δ n + 1 θ 0 .
(3.19)

Applying Δ k to the first equation of (3.19), we get

t Δ k δ θ ( n + 1 ) + u ( n ) Δ k δ θ ( n + 1 ) = [ u ( n ) , Δ k ] δ θ ( n + 1 ) Δ k ( δ u ( n ) θ ( n ) ) .
(3.20)

Exactly as in the proof of (3.7), we get

δ θ ( n + 1 ) F ˙ p , q s 1 C Δ n + 1 θ 0 F ˙ p , q s 1 + 0 t 2 k ( s 1 ) ( [ u ( n ) , Δ k ] δ θ ( n + 1 ) ) ( τ ) q ( Z ) p d τ + 0 t δ u ( n ) θ ( n ) ( τ ) F ˙ p , q s 1 d τ C Δ n + 1 θ 0 F ˙ p , q s 1 + 0 t ( u ( n ) L δ θ ( n + 1 ) F ˙ p , q s 1 + δ θ ( n + 1 ) L u ( n ) F ˙ p , q s 1 ) d τ + 0 t ( δ u ( n ) L θ ( n ) F ˙ p , q s 1 + δ u ( n ) F ˙ p , q s 1 θ ( n ) L ) d τ C Δ n + 1 θ 0 F ˙ p , q s 1 + 0 t ( u ( n ) F p , q s δ θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s + δ u ( n ) F p , q s 1 θ ( n ) F p , q s ) d τ C Δ n + 1 θ 0 F ˙ p , q s 1 + 0 t ( θ ( n ) F p , q s δ θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s + δ θ ( n ) F p , q s 1 θ ( n ) F p , q s ) d τ ,
(3.21)

where we used Proposition 2.1, Proposition 2.3, the embedding F p , q s 1 L , and the boundedness of the Calderón-Zygmund singular integral operator on F p , q s . Thanks to the Fourier support of Δ n + 1 θ 0 , we have

Δ n + 1 θ 0 F ˙ p , q s 1 C 2 ( n + 1 ) θ 0 F ˙ p , q s .
(3.22)

Now, we estimate the L p norm of δ θ ( n + 1 ) . Multiplying | δ θ ( n + 1 ) | p 2 δ θ ( n + 1 ) on both sides of the first equation of (3.19), and integrating the resulting equations over R d , we obtain

δ θ ( n + 1 ) ( t ) L p Δ n + 1 θ 0 L p + 0 t δ u ( n ) θ ( n ) ( τ ) L p d τ 2 ( n + 1 ) z 0 + F ˙ p , q s + C 0 t δ u ( n ) L p θ ( n ) L d τ 2 ( n + 1 ) z 0 + F ˙ p , q s + C 0 t δ θ ( n ) L p θ ( n ) F p , q s d τ ,

which together with (3.21) and (3.22) gives

δ θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s 1 C 2 ( n + 1 ) θ 0 F p , q s + C 0 t ( θ ( n ) F p , q s δ θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s 1 + δ θ ( n ) F p , q s 1 θ ( n ) F p , q s ) d τ C 2 ( n + 1 ) θ 0 F p , q s + C T sup t [ 0 , T ] θ ( n ) F p , q s δ θ ( n + 1 ) F p , q s 1 + C T sup t [ 0 , T ] θ ( n ) F p , q s δ θ ( n ) F p , q s 1 .
(3.23)

Equation (3.23) together with (3.17) yields

δ θ ( n + 1 ) X T s 1 C 1 2 ( n + 1 ) + C 1 T δ θ ( n + 1 ) X T s 1 + C 1 T δ θ ( n ) X T s 1 ,
(3.24)

where C 1 = C 1 ( θ 0 F p , q s ). Thus, if C 1 T 1 4 , then

δ θ ( n + 1 ) X T s 1 C 1 2 n +2 C 1 T δ θ ( n ) X T s 1 .

This implies that

δ θ ( n + 1 ) X T s 1 2 C 1 2 ( n + 1 ) .

Thus, { θ ( n ) } n N 0 is a Cauchy sequence in X T 1 s 1 . By the standard argument, for T 1 min{ T 0 , 1 4 C 1 }, the limit θ X T 1 s solves (1.1) with the initial data θ 0 . The fact that θLip([0,T]; F p , q s ) follows from the uniform estimate (3.18).

Step 4. Uniqueness.

Consider θ ˜ C([0, T 1 ];( F p , q s )) is another solution to (1.1) with the same initial data. Let δθ=θ θ ˜ and δu=u u ˜ . Then δθ satisfies the following equation:

{ t δ θ + u δ θ = δ u θ ˜ , δ θ | t = 0 = 0 .

In the same way as the derivation in (3.24), we obtain

δ θ X T s 1 C 2 T δ θ X T s 1

for sufficiently small T. This implies that δθ0, i.e., θ θ ˜ .

Blow-up criterion.

For the a priori estimate (3.12), we only need to dominate u L and θ L . From Proposition 2.2 and the boundedness of the Calderón-Zygmund operator from F ˙ , 0 into itself, we have

u L C ( 1 + u F ˙ , 0 ( log + u F p , q s 1 + 1 ) ) C ( 1 + θ F ˙ , 1 ( log + θ F p , q s + 1 ) ) .

Similarly,

θ L C ( 1 + θ F ˙ , 1 ( log + θ F p , q s + 1 ) ) .

Thus, the a priori estimate (3.12) gives

θ F p , q s C θ 0 F p , q s exp ( C 0 t θ ( τ ) F ˙ , 1 ( log + θ ( τ ) F p , q s + 1 ) d τ ) .

By the Gronwall inequality

θ F p , q s C θ 0 F p , q s exp ( C exp ( 0 t θ ( τ ) F ˙ , 1 d τ ) ) .

Therefore, if lim sup t T θ ( t ) F p , q s =, then 0 T θ ( t ) F ˙ , 1 dt=.

On the other hand, it follows from the Sobolev embedding F p , q s W 1 , F ˙ , 1 for s>d/p+1 that

0 T θ ( t ) F ˙ , 1 d t T sup 0 τ T θ ( τ ) F ˙ , 1 T sup 0 τ T θ ( τ ) L T sup 0 τ T θ ( τ ) F p , q s .

Then 0 T θ ( t ) F ˙ , 1 dt= implies lim sup t T θ ( t ) F p , q s =.

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Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Funds of China for Distinguished Young Scholar under Grant No. 50925727, The National Defense Advanced Research Project Grant Nos. C1120110004, 9140A27020211DZ5102, the Key Grant Project of Chinese Ministry of Education under Grant No. 313018, and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2012HGCX0003).

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Yu, W., He, Y. On the well-posedness of the incompressible porous media equation in Triebel-Lizorkin spaces. Bound Value Probl 2014, 95 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-2770-2014-95

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