This work develops a covariant continuity-law formulation in which the fundamental variables form a conserved current satisfying a transport constraint together with a quadratic resistance functional built from covariant derivatives of the flow field. Under a closure admissibility condition on the evolution of the resistance density, the associated weighted functional obeys a coercive energy–dissipation inequality. A spatial projection of the full system defines effective fluid variables and yields an exact reduced equation containing additional constitutive and residual terms. The classical incompressible Navier–Stokes equation appears only after truncation of these terms. It is shown that the weighted closure estimate available in the full continuity-law formulation does not in general reduce to a closed estimate in the classical variables alone. In this sense, the Navier–Stokes regularity problem may be viewed as a question posed on a reduced description that does not retain the full coercive structure of the extended transport system. The results provide a structural analysis of closure in incompressible flow within a geometric transport framework without modifying the classical equations.
Roy Herbert (Sat,) studied this question.
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