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arxiv: 2606.30148 · v1 · pith:KOP34JAWnew · submitted 2026-06-29 · 🧮 math.AP

Asymptotic justification of the Reynolds equation for a spherical bearing

Pith reviewed 2026-06-30 05:28 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP
keywords Stokes equationsReynolds equationspherical bearingasymptotic convergencelubrication theorythin film flow
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The pith

The Stokes equations between two spheres converge to the Reynolds equation as their minimum separation approaches zero.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper shows that the velocity and pressure fields solving the Stokes equations in the narrow gap between two spheres approach the fields given by the Reynolds lubrication equation on the projected contact area. This limit is taken as the minimum distance between the sphere surfaces tends to zero while the spheres keep fixed shapes. A reader would care because the Reynolds equation is a standard reduced model in bearing design whose rigorous validity for spherical geometry had not been established before. The result supplies the missing asymptotic link between the full three-dimensional flow and the simpler two-dimensional model.

Core claim

The solution of the Stokes problem in a domain between two closely spaced spheres converges, as the distance between the spheres approaches zero, to the solution of a Reynolds equation.

What carries the argument

The asymptotic limit process in which the minimum gap between the two fixed spheres tends to zero, with the Stokes equations holding in the three-dimensional gap and yielding the Reynolds equation on the two-dimensional projected domain.

If this is right

  • The Reynolds equation supplies a mathematically justified reduced model for lubrication flow in spherical bearings under small-gap conditions.
  • The full three-dimensional Stokes problem reduces to a two-dimensional equation defined on the projected contact region in the limit.
  • Engineering approximations that replace the Stokes equations with the Reynolds equation for spherical geometries receive direct asymptotic support.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same limit argument may extend to other smooth curved surfaces that are not exactly spheres.
  • High-resolution numerical solutions of the Stokes equations for successively smaller gaps could directly test the predicted convergence rate.

Load-bearing premise

The two spheres keep fixed shapes and positions while their minimum separation tends to zero and the fluid obeys the Stokes equations throughout the gap.

What would settle it

A computation or experiment in which the difference between the Stokes solution and the Reynolds solution fails to approach zero in the relevant norm as the minimum gap size is made arbitrarily small would falsify the convergence claim.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2606.30148 by Guy Bayada, Jos\'e M. Rodr\'iguez, Raquel Taboada-V\'azquez.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Example of spherical bearing The gap between the inner sphere and the outer sphere is given by h ε (φ, θ) = εh(φ, θ), 0 < h0 ≤ h(φ, θ) ≤ h1, (3) h is smooth and 2π-periodic in the variable θ (4) Let us define the unit normal to the sphere (1) as N⃗ (φ, θ) = (sin φ cos θ,sin φ sin θ, cos φ) (5) then, the domain between the two spheres is defined by Ω ε = {⃗x = (x1, x2, x3) ∈ R 3 / Xi(φ, θ) ≤ xi ≤ Xi(φ, θ) +… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Parameters ξ1, ξ2 Remark 3. Denoting ⃗ξ = (ξ1, ξ2, ξ3), with ξ1 = φ and ξ2 = θ, the domain (6) can also be defined by means of a change of variables ⃗x = Φε ( ⃗ξ) = X⃗ (ξ1, ξ2) + εξ3h(ξ1, ξ2)N⃗ (ξ1, ξ2) (7) so we have that Ω ε = Φε (Ω), Ω = D × (0, 1) (8) For the steps that follow, it will be useful to decompose the previous change of variables into the following simpler ones: ⃗ζ = (ζ1, ζ2, ζ3) = Φε 1 ( ⃗ξ… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

To our knowledge, there is no rigorous mathematical justification of the Reynolds equation for a spherical bearing. In this article, we demonstrate that the solution of the Stokes problem in a domain between two closely spaced spheres converges, as the distance between the spheres approaches zero, to the solution of a "Reynolds equation".

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 0 minor

Summary. The paper claims to provide the first rigorous mathematical justification of the Reynolds equation for a spherical bearing by proving that the solution of the Stokes problem in the thin gap between two closely spaced spheres converges to the solution of a Reynolds equation as the minimum separation tends to zero.

Significance. If the convergence result holds in a suitable topology, the work would supply a missing rigorous foundation for the Reynolds approximation in spherical lubrication problems, which are common in mechanical engineering. The abstract alone supplies no proof sketch, functional setting, or convergence statement, so the actual significance cannot yet be evaluated.

major comments (1)
  1. Abstract: the central claim is stated without any indication of the functional setting for the Stokes system, the precise topology or norm in which convergence is asserted, or even a sketch of the argument. This absence makes it impossible to check whether the derivation is free of gaps or post-hoc restrictions on the geometry or data.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their feedback. We address the single major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: Abstract: the central claim is stated without any indication of the functional setting for the Stokes system, the precise topology or norm in which convergence is asserted, or even a sketch of the argument. This absence makes it impossible to check whether the derivation is free of gaps or post-hoc restrictions on the geometry or data.

    Authors: We agree that the abstract is insufficiently detailed on the functional setting, the precise mode of convergence, and the argument outline. In the revised manuscript we will expand the abstract to state that the Stokes system is posed in the three-dimensional thin-gap domain between two spheres of fixed radii with minimum separation ε, with no-slip conditions on both surfaces; that the velocity field converges strongly in L² and weakly in H¹ (after appropriate rescaling) to the solution of the Reynolds equation as ε→0; and that the proof proceeds by rescaling the gap coordinate, deriving a priori estimates uniform in ε, and passing to the limit via compactness. The body of the paper already contains the full functional-analytic framework and the complete argument, but we accept that the abstract should make these elements visible. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

Direct convergence proof from Stokes to Reynolds; no circular reduction

full rationale

The paper's core claim is a mathematical convergence result: the Stokes solution in the gap between two spheres converges to the Reynolds equation solution as the minimum separation tends to zero. The abstract frames this as a direct asymptotic justification without any fitted parameters, self-definitional relations, or load-bearing self-citations. No equations or steps are described that reduce the output to the input by construction. This matches the expected non-circular case for a rigorous limit theorem in a fixed geometry.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

Review performed on abstract only; the paper is expected to rest on the standard incompressible Stokes system and standard thin-domain scaling assumptions common to lubrication asymptotics.

axioms (2)
  • standard math The fluid obeys the steady incompressible Stokes equations in the gap domain.
    The abstract begins from the Stokes problem.
  • domain assumption The gap height tends to zero while the spheres remain rigid and the contact region is projected onto a fixed domain.
    Required for the asymptotic regime described in the abstract.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5571 in / 1185 out tokens · 25130 ms · 2026-06-30T05:28:30.095278+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

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