Optimal transport methods for kinetic equations, boundary value problems, and discretization of measures
Quattrocchi F. 2025. Optimal transport methods for kinetic equations, boundary value problems, and discretization of measures. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
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Thesis
| PhD
| Published
| English
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Corresponding author has ISTA affiliation
Department
Series Title
ISTA Thesis
Abstract
The theory of optimal transport provides an elegant and powerful description of many evolution
equations as gradient flows. The primary objective of this thesis is to adapt and extend the
theory to deal with important equations that are not covered by the classical framework,
specifically boundary value problems and kinetic equations. Additionally, we establish new
results in periodic homogenization for discrete dynamical optimal transport and in quantization
of measures.
Section 1.1 serves as an invitation to the classical theory of optimal transport, including the
main definitions and a selection of well-established theorems. Sections 1.2-1.5 introduce the
main results of this thesis, outline the motivations, and review the current state of the art.
In Chapter 2, we consider the Fokker–Planck equation on a bounded set with positive Dirichlet
boundary conditions. We construct a time-discrete scheme involving a modification of the
Wasserstein distance and, under weak assumptions, prove its convergence to a solution of this
boundary value problem. In dimension 1, we show that this solution is a gradient flow in a
suitable space of measures.
Chapter 3 presents joint work with Giovanni Brigati and Jan Maas. We introduce a new theory
of optimal transport to describe and study particle systems at the mesoscopic scale. We prove
adapted versions of some fundamental theorems, including the Benamou–Brenier formula and
the identification of absolutely continuous curves of measures.
Chapter 4 presents joint work with Lorenzo Portinale. We prove convergence of dynamical
transportation functionals on periodic graphs in the large-scale limit when the cost functional
is asymptotically linear. Additionally, we show that discrete 1-Wasserstein distances converge
to 1-Wasserstein distances constructed from crystalline norms on R
d
.
Chapter 5 concerns optimal empirical quantization: the problem of approximating a measure
by the sum of n equally weighted Dirac deltas, so as to minimize the error in the p-Wasserstein
distance. Our main result is an analog of Zador’s theorem, providing asymptotic bounds for
the minimal error as n tends to infinity.
Keywords
Publishing Year
Date Published
2025-11-03
Publisher
Institute of Science and Technology Austria
Acknowledgement
The research contained in this thesis has received funding from the Austrian Science
Fund (FWF) project 10.55776/F65.
Page
240
ISSN
IST-REx-ID
Cite this
Quattrocchi F. Optimal transport methods for kinetic equations, boundary value problems, and discretization of measures. 2025. doi:10.15479/AT-ISTA-20563
Quattrocchi, F. (2025). Optimal transport methods for kinetic equations, boundary value problems, and discretization of measures. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT-ISTA-20563
Quattrocchi, Filippo. “Optimal Transport Methods for Kinetic Equations, Boundary Value Problems, and Discretization of Measures.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT-ISTA-20563.
F. Quattrocchi, “Optimal transport methods for kinetic equations, boundary value problems, and discretization of measures,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025.
Quattrocchi F. 2025. Optimal transport methods for kinetic equations, boundary value problems, and discretization of measures. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
Quattrocchi, Filippo. Optimal Transport Methods for Kinetic Equations, Boundary Value Problems, and Discretization of Measures. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025, doi:10.15479/AT-ISTA-20563.
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