1. Introduction
The purpose of this work is to discuss the long-time asymptotic behavior of the solution to the following Cauchy problem for partly elastic collisions operators, as introduced by E. W. Larsen and P. F. Zweifel [
1]:
      with periodic boundary conditions
      
      where 
, with 
 being an open subset of 
 given by
      
      where the speed 
v in 
V is written in the form 
, 
 (
 is the unit sphere of 
) and 
, where 
. The velocity space is equipped with the Lebesgue measure 
, where 
 is the Lebesgue measure on the unit sphere 
. The function 
 represents the number density of particles with position 
x and velocity 
v at time 
t. The function 
 is called the collision frequency and the functions 
, 
 and 
 denote the scattering kernels of operators 
, 
, and 
, which we define below.
In this model, the collision operator consists of three terms:
The collision operator 
 denotes the classical collision operator involved in the classical neutron transport theory (see, for example, [
2]); this can be expressed by
      
      and it corresponds physically to fission, high energy elastic slowing down, and thermal inelastic scattering. 
 is an elastic operator for low energy neutrons describing microscopic events in which the kinetic energy is conserved and velocities are changed only in their direction. It is given by
      
Finally, 
 represents high energy inelastic scattering and is described by a downshift operator of the form
      
      where 
 describes an event in which a discrete energy 
 is lost by a neutron at 
x with an initial speed 
 and final speed 
. The speed 
 is defined by
      
      where 
M is the mass of neutrons.
Finally, by 
, we denote the operator
      
      called the elastic collision operator. It describes the collisions, which do not vary the kinetic energy of the neutrons, they act only through the angular part of the variable of velocity.
Let us notice that the spectral properties of the operator 
 was first studied by E. W. Larsen and P. F. Zweifel in [
1] in the space 
. It was considered afterwards by M. Sbihi  [
3,
4] for vacuum boundary conditions (zero incoming flow) and for reentry boundary conditions in [
5]. This work intends to investigate the properties of solutions to Problem (
1) with periodic boundary conditions in a box of finite measure. Our approach is based on the spectral theory of the semigroup generated by the operator 
. Due to certain technical difficulties, we restrict our analysis to partially elastic collision operators. So, we suppose that 
; therefore, the collision operator is written as 
. Hence, the Cauchy problem (
1) and (
2) may be written abstractly on the spaces 
, 
 in the form
      
      where 
 denotes the initial data.
It is well known that 
T generates a 
-semigroup. As 
 and 
 are bounded operatiors, the operator 
 also generates a 
-semigroup, denoted by 
. This semigroup provides a solution to the Cauchy problem (
3) for any initial data 
 that belongs to 
. So, in order to obtain more information about the solution, in particular about its behavior over long times (
), knowledge of the spectral properties of 
 plays a central role. We point out that the spectral properties of 
 and its generator are, for now, multidimensional bounded geometry that is well understood for absorbing boundary conditions (see, for example, [
6], Chapter 4 and the references therein). The case of no-reentry boundary conditions has been considered in particular cases, especially in slab geometry, and a few papers have dealt with higher dimensions (see, for example, [
7]).
We first recall the concept of essential type for a strongly continuous semigroup on a Banach space. Let 
X be a Banach space and let 
B be an operator belonging to 
. We define the essential resolvent set of 
B by
      
      where 
 is the resolvent set of 
B. The essential spectral radius of 
B is defined by
      
      where 
 denotes the essential spectral radius. Let 
A be the generator of a strongly continuous semigroup 
 on 
X with type 
ω (see, for example, [
8], Definition 5.6, p. 40). Following Voigt ([
9], Lemma 2.1, p. 157) there exists a real 
 (called the essential type) such that
      
	  Because 
, following the classical perturbation theory (see, for example,  [
8], Section 1, p. 157), the operator 
 generates also a strongly continuous semigroup on 
X. It is given by the Dyson-Philips expansion, that is,
      
      where
      
      and the remainder term of order 
n, 
, of the Dyson–Philips expansion is given by
      
According to Proposition 1, if some remainder term of the Dyson–Philips expansion 
 for all 
 is compact, then the operators 
 and 
 have the same essential type and, therefore, the same spectral radius, that is, 
. We note that the stability of the essential type via the compactness of the remainder terms of the Dyson–Philips expansion 
 was extensively investigated, in particular, in neutron transport theory (see, for example,  [
3,
9,
10,
11,
12] and the references therein). Hence, 
 consists primarily of finitely many eigenvalues. If such eigenvalues exist, then, according to the spectral decomposition theorem, the semigroup 
 can be decomposed into two parts: the first part captures the time development of finitely many eigenmodes, while the second part exhibits faster decay. Using the spectral mapping theorem for the point spectrum, we infer that for any 
, the set 
 consists of finitely many isolated eigenvalues, say 
 Let 
, and 
. The solution of the Cauchy problem satisfies
      
      where 
, and 
, and 
 denote the spectral projection and the nilpotent operator, respectively, associated with 
, 
The purpose of this paper is to discuss the time asymptotic behavior of the solution to Problems (
1) and (
2) in bounded geometry via the spectral properties of the strongly continuous semigroup generated by the operator 
. Our approach consists of discussing the compactness properties of the second-order remainder term of the Dyson–Phillips expansion, 
, which yields a comparison of the essential types of the two semigroups 
 and 
. This provides a description of the time asymptotic behaviour of the solution to Problems (
1) and (
2) via standard arguments (see the paragraphs above).
The outline of this work is as follows. In 
Section 2, we introduce the functional setting of the problem and fix the different notations. We also gather some results needed in the sequel. Our main result, Theorem 1, is stated and established in 
Section 3. This result is new, as it is known only for the vacuum boundary (see [
3]). We close this section by stating two open problems related to the description of the time asymptotic behaviour of the solution to Problems (
1) and (
2) on the space 
, even for vacuum boundary conditions.
Notation: Throughout this paper, if X is a Banach space, then  stands for the set of all bounded linear operators on X.
  2. Preliminaries
Let 
 be an open set im 
. Suppose that the collision frequency 
 depends only on the velocity variable and satisfies
      
The velocity space
      
      is endowed with the Lebesgue measure 
, where 
 is the Lebesgue measure on the unit sphere 
 of 
.
We define the periodic streaming operator 
T by
      
      where
      
	  Now, we recall that each function 
 in 
 can be written in the form
      
      where 
 is the Fourier coefficient of 
 of order 
k, that is,
      
We recall that 
, is the volume of the paved set 
. For convention, we put
      
	  From the Parseval formula, we have
      
	  So, the domain of the operator 
T may be written in the form
      
	  Therefore, for all 
, we have
      
	  It is well known that 
T generates a strongly continuous semigroup 
, which acts as follows
      
      for all 
 and 
.
The operators 
 and 
 are bounded, i.e.,
      
Remark 1. As T generates a -semigroup on  and the operators  and  are bounded, from the classical perturbation theory (see, for example,  [8], Chapter III, Section 1, p. 157), the operators  and  generate strongly continuous semigroups  and , respectively. In the remainder of this work, we will sometimes use notations  and  or  and .  We recall that
      
      where
      
      with the 
nth order remainder term 
 is given by
      
Definition 1. Let  be strongly continuous mappings. We define their convolution byThe convolution of F j-times will be denoted by  (j times).  According to Definition 1, the remainder term of order 
n, 
, can be written in the following form
      
	  The following result will be required in the sequel (see, for example, [
6], Theorem 
, p. 24).
Proposition 1. Assume that the remainder term  is compact for all  on  with . Then, the -semigroups  and  have the same essential type, that is,  for all .
 We also recall the following interpolation result for positive compact operators (cf. [
13], Theorem 
, p. 57).
Proposition 2. Let  be a positive measure space and let B be a bounded linear operator, such thatIf there exists , such that B is compact in , then B is compact in all , .  Recall that in neutron transport theory, the collision operator 
 has the form
      
      where 
 is a nonnegative measurable function on 
.
Note that 
 is local with respect to the variable space 
. So, it may be viewed as an operator valued mapping from 
 into 
, that is,
      
      where
      
Now, we are ready to state the definition of regular collisions operators [
2].
Definition 2. Let . A collision operator  is said to be regular on
 if:
 is a set of collectively compact operators on  i.e., For  
Here,  denotes the dual operator of  and .
 This class of operators enjoys the useful approximation property (cf [
2], Proposition 1).
Lemma 1. The class of regular collision operators is the closure in the operator norm of the class of collision operator with kernels of the formwhere I is finite, ,  and  with .  According to Lemma 1, for our analysis, it is sufficient to consider collision operators 
 with kernels of the form (
7).
The elastic collision operator 
 is defined by
      
We introduce the following hypothesis:
 for all 
, the set
      
      is relatively compact in 
 and, for every, 
,
      
      is relatively compact in 
.
We note that hypothesis 
 was introduced by M. Sbihi in [
4] (see also [
3]).
Under condition 
, we have
      
      where 
 is the operator defined by
      
We also recall the following result, owing to M. Sbihi [
3].
Lemma 2. An elastic collision operator satisfying  can be approximated in the norm operator topology by collision operators with kernels of the formwhere ,  and ,  with q denotes the conjugate exponent of p, while J a finite set.