Constructing turing complete Euler flows in dimension 3

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Abstract

Can every physical system simulate any Turing machine? This is a classical problem that is intimately connected with the undecidability of certain physical phenomena. Concerning fluid flows, Moore [C. Moore, Nonlinearity 4, 199 (1991)] asked if hydrodynamics is capable of performing computations. More recently, Tao launched a program based on the Turing completeness of the Euler equations to address the blow-up problem in the Navier- Stokes equations. In this direction, the undecidability of some physical systems has been studied in recent years, from the quantum gap problem to quantum-field theories. To the best of our knowledge, the existence of undecidable particle paths of threedimensional fluid flows has remained an elusive open problem since Moore's works in the early 1990s. In this article, we construct a Turing complete stationary Euler flow on a Riemannian S3 and speculate on its implications concerning Tao's approach to the blow-up problem in the Navier-Stokes equations.

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Cardona, R., Miranda, E., Peralta-Salas, D., & Presas, F. (2021). Constructing turing complete Euler flows in dimension 3. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(19). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2026818118

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