Why the Navier-Stokes Problem Is Hard
The core mathematical obstacles standing in the way The nonlinearity trap Many of the equations people first meet in physics are linear: double the input and the response doubles. Navier-Stokes is ...

Source: DEV Community
The core mathematical obstacles standing in the way The nonlinearity trap Many of the equations people first meet in physics are linear: double the input and the response doubles. Navier-Stokes is not like that. Navier-Stokes? Nonlinear. The fluid's velocity affects its own rate of change, which means the fluid pushes itself. Imagine trying to predict where a crowd will go when every single person's movement depends on what everyone around them is doing, and what those people are doing depends on everyone around them, spiraling outward forever. That's the situation you're staring at. The culprit is the self-interaction term $(u \cdot \nabla)u$. It creates feedback loops where small disturbances amplify into large ones, and it's why fluid turbulence is so wildly complex (see subproblems for more). Supercriticality: the scaling gap The Navier-Stokes equations have a scaling symmetry. Zoom in on a solution, make everything smaller and faster by the right amounts, and you get another perfe