Representation of solutions and large-time behavior for fully nonlocal diffusion equations
Jukka Kemppainen, Juhana Siljander, Rico Zacher

TL;DR
This paper investigates nonlocal heat equations with fractional space and time derivatives, providing solution representations, decay rates, and analyzing the effects of dimensionality on solution behavior.
Contribution
It introduces a representation formula for classical solutions and analyzes decay rates, highlighting the critical dimension phenomenon in fractional nonlocal diffusion.
Findings
Representation formula for classical solutions
Quantitative decay rates for solutions
Critical dimension phenomenon in decay behavior
Abstract
We study the Cauchy problem for a nonlocal heat equation, which is of fractional order both in space and time. We prove four main theorems: (i) a representation formula for classical solutions, (ii) a quantitative decay rate at which the solution tends to the fundamental solution, (iii) optimal -decay of mild solutions in all dimensions, (iv) -decay of weak solutions via energy methods. The first result relies on a delicate analysis of the definition of classical solutions. After proving the representation formula we carefully analyze the integral representation to obtain the quantitative decay rates of (ii). Next we use Fourier analysis techniques to obtain the optimal decay rate for mild solutions. Here we encounter the critical dimension phenomenon where the decay rate attains the decay rate of that in a bounded domain for large enough dimensions. Consequently,…
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