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\AtBeginDocument{{\noindent\small
\emph{Electronic Journal of Differential Equations},
Vol. 2015 (2015), No. 55, pp. 1--25.\newline
ISSN: 1072-6691. URL: http://ejde.math.txstate.edu or http://ejde.math.unt.edu
\newline ftp ejde.math.txstate.edu}
\thanks{\copyright 2015 Texas State University - San Marcos.}
\vspace{9mm}}

\begin{document}
\title[\hfilneg EJDE-2015/55\hfil
Weak solutions to the Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system]
{Weak solutions to the Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system
with nonlinear Neumann boundary conditions
arising from surface energies}

\author[G. Carbou, P. Fabrie, K. Santugini \hfil EJDE-2015/55\hfilneg]
{Gilles Carbou, Pierre Fabrie, K\'evin Santugini}

\address{Gilles Carbou \newline
Universit\'e  de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour, LMAP, UMR CNRS 5142,
 F-64000 Pau, France}
\email{gilles.carbou@univ-pau.fr}

\address{Pierre Fabrie \newline
Bordeaux INP, IMB, UMR 5251, F-33400, Talence, France}
\email{Pierre.Fabrie@math.u-bordeaux1.fr}

\address{K\'evin Santugini \newline
Bordeaux INP, IMB, UMR 5251, F-33400, Talence, France}
\email{Kevin.Santugini@math.u-bordeaux1.fr}

\thanks{Submitted June 4, 2014. Published February 26, 2015.}
\subjclass[2000]{35D30, 35F31, 35Q61}
\keywords{Ferromagnetism; Micromagnetism; surface energy;
\hfill\break\indent Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell equation;
     nonlinear PDE}

\begin{abstract}
 We study the Landau-Lifshitz system associated with Maxwell equations
 in a bilayered ferromagnetic body when super-exchange and surface
 anisotropy interactions are present in the spacer in-between the layers.
 In the presence of these surface energies, the Neumann boundary condition
 becomes nonlinear. We prove, in three dimensions, the existence of global
 weak solutions to the Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system with nonlinear Neumann
 boundary conditions.
\end{abstract}

\maketitle
\numberwithin{equation}{section}
\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section]
\newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma}
\newtheorem{remark}[theorem]{Remark}
\newtheorem{definition}[theorem]{Definition}
\allowdisplaybreaks

\section{Introduction}

Ferromagnetic materials are widely used in the industrial
world. Their four main applications are data storage (hard drives), radar stealth,
communications (wave circulator), and energy (transformers). For an
introduction to ferromagnetism, see~Aharoni\cite{Aharoni:introduc} or
Brown\cite{Brown:microm}.

The state of a ferromagnetic body is characterized by its
magnetization $\mathbf{m}$, a vector field whose norm is equal to $1$
inside the ferromagnetic body and null outside. The evolution of
$\mathbf{m}$ can be modeled by the Landau-Lifshitz equation
\[
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}=
-\mathbf{m}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}
-\alpha\mathbf{m}\wedge (\mathbf{m}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}),
\]
where $\mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}$ depends on $\mathbf{m}$ and contains various
contributions. In particular, in this paper, $\mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}$
includes various volume and surface energy densities, among which
the solution to Maxwell equations and several surface terms such as
super-exchange and surface anisotropy.

Alouges and Soyeur \cite{Alouges.Soyeur:OnGlobal} established
the existence and the non-uniqueness of weak solutions to the Landau-Lifshitz
system when only exchange is present, \textit{i.e.} when
$\mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}=\Delta\mathbf{m}$, see also
Visintin \cite{Visintin:Landau}.
Labb\'e~\cite[Ch. 10]{labbe:mumag} extended the existence result  in
the presence of the magnetostatic field.
In the absence of the exchange interaction,
Joly, M\'etivier and Rauch obtain global existence and uniqueness results
in \cite{Joly:global}.
Carbou and  Fabrie~\cite{Carbou.Fabrie:Time} proved
the existence of weak solutions when the Landau-Lifshitz equation is
associated with Maxwell equations.
Santugini proved in \cite{Santugini:SolutionsLL}, see
also~\cite[chap. 6]{Santugini:These}, the existence of weak solutions globally in
time to the magnetostatic Landau-Lifshitz system in the presence of surface energies
that cause the Neumann boundary conditions to become nonlinear.
In this paper, we prove the existence of weak solutions to the full
Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system with the nonlinear Neumann boundary
conditions arising from the super-exchange and the surface anisotropy energies.
In addition, we address  the long time behavior  by describing the $\omega$-limit
set of the trajectories.

The plan of the article is the following.
In \S\ref{sect:notations}, we introduce several notations we use
throughout this paper. In \S\ref{sect:MicromagneticModel}, we recall the micromagnetic
model.  In \S\ref{sect:LandauLifshitzSystem}, we state our main
theorems.
Theorem~\ref{theo:ExistenceWeakLandauLifshitzMaxwellSurfaceEnergies}
 states the global existence in time of weak solutions to the
Landau-Lifshitz system with the nonlinear Neumann Boundary conditions
arising from the super-exchange and the surface anisotropy energies.
Theorem~\ref{theo-omegalim} describes the $\omega$-limit set of a solution
given by the previous theorem.
In \S\ref{sect:prerequisites}, before starting the proofs, we recall
technical results on Sobolev Spaces. We prove
Theorem~\ref{theo:ExistenceWeakLandauLifshitzMaxwellSurfaceEnergies}
 in \S\ref{sect:proofExistenceWeakLLMSurfaceEnergies} and
Theorem~\ref{theo-omegalim} in \S\ref{section-omegalimit}.


\subsection*{Notation} Throughout the paper, $\lVert\cdot\rVert$
denotes the Euclidean norm over $\mathbb{R}^d$ where $d$ is a positive integer,
often equal to $3$. We denote by $\cdot$ the associated scalar product.
The $\mathrm{L}^2$ norm over a measurable set
$A$ is denoted by $\lVert\cdot\rVert_{\mathrm{L}^2(A)}$.

\section{Geometry of spacers and related notation}\label{sect:notations}

In this paper, we consider a ferromagnetic domain with spacer. We denote by
$\Omega={B}\times \mathcal{I}^{}$ this domain,
where ${B}$ is a bounded domain of $\mathbb{R}^2$ with smooth
boundary and $\mathcal{I}=\rbrack-{L^-},0\lbrack\;\cup\;
\rbrack 0,{L^+}\lbrack$ where ${L^+}$ and ${L^-}$
are two positive real numbers.


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On the common boundary
$\Gamma={B}\times \{0\}$ (the spacer), $\gamma^+$
is the trace map from above that sends the restriction
$\mathbf{m}_{\vert{B}\times \rbrack0,{L^+}\lbrack}$
to $\gamma^+\mathbf{m}$ on $\Gamma$, and
$\gamma^-$ is the trace map from below that sends the restriction
$\mathbf{m}_{\vert{B}\times \rbrack-{L^-},0\lbrack}$
to $\gamma^-\mathbf{m}$ on $\Gamma$. To simplify notations, we consider $\Gamma$
has two sides: $\Gamma^+={B}\times \{0^+\}$ and $\Gamma^-={B}\times \{0^-\}$.
By $\Gamma^\pm$, we denote the union of these two sides $\Gamma^+\cup\Gamma^-$.
In this paper, integrating over $\Gamma^\pm$ means integrating over both
sides, while integrating over $\Gamma$ means integrating only once.
On $\Gamma^\pm$, $\gamma$ is the map that sends $\mathbf{m}$
to its trace on both sides.  The trace map $\gamma^{*}$ is the trace
map that exchange the two sides of $\Gamma$: it maps $\mathbf{m}$
to $\gamma(\mathbf{m}\circ s)$ where $s$
is the application that sends
$(x,y,z,t)$ to $(x,y,-z,t)$.

For convenience, we denote by $\boldsymbol{\nu}$ the extension to $\Omega$ of
the unitary exterior normal defined
on $\Gamma^\pm$, thus $\boldsymbol{\nu}(\mathbf{x})=-\mathbf{e}_z$
if $z>0$ or if $\mathbf{x}$ belongs to $\Gamma^+$,
and $\boldsymbol{\nu}(\mathbf{x})=\mathbf{e}_z$ if $z<0$ or
if $\mathbf{x}$ belongs to $\Gamma^-$.

In this article, $\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$ denotes
$\mathrm{H}^1(\Omega;\mathbb{R}^3)$,
and $\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$ denotes
$\mathrm{L}^2(\Omega;\mathbb{R}^3)$.
By $\mathcal{C}^\infty_c(\Omega)$, we denote the set of
$\mathcal{C}^\infty$ functions that have compact support in
$\Omega$. By $\mathcal{C}^\infty_c(\lbrack0,T\rbrack\times \Omega)$,
we denote the set of
$\mathcal{C}^\infty$ functions that have compact support in
$\lbrack0,T\rbrack\times  \Omega$.

\section{The micromagnetic model}\label{sect:MicromagneticModel}

In the micromagnetic model, introduced by W.F~Brown\cite{Brown:microm}, the
magnetization $\mathbf{M}$ is the mean at the mesoscopic scale of
the microscopic magnetization. It has constant norm $M_s$ in the
ferromagnetic material and is null outside. In this
paper, we only work with the dimensionless magnetization
$\mathbf{m}=\mathbf{M}/M_s$.

The variations of $\mathbf{m}$ are described by a phenomenological partial
differential equation introduced in Landau-Lifshitz~\cite{L.L.:Phys},
the Landau-Lifshitz equation:
\[
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}=-\mathbf{m}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}
-\alpha\mathbf{m}\wedge (\mathbf{m}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}),
\]
where the magnetic effective field $\mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}$ is
the  Fr\'echet derivative of the micromagnetic energy. This
micromagnetic energy is the sum of several contributions.
Its minimizers under the constraint $\lVert\mathbf{m}\rVert=1$
are the steady states of the magnetization. Let us describe now the
contributions of the energy.


\subsection{Volume energies}
\subsubsection{Exchange}

Exchange is essential in the micromagnetic theory. Without exchange,
there would be no ferromagnetic materials. This
interaction aligns the magnetization over short distances.
In the isotropic and homogenous case,
the exchange energy may be modeled by the following energy
\[
\mathrm{E}_{e}(\mathbf{m})
=\frac{A}{2}\int_\Omega\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x},
\]
where the constant $A$ is called exchange coefficient and depends
on the material.
The associated exchange operator is $\mathcal{H}_e(\mathbf{m})=-A\Delta\mathbf{m}$.


\subsubsection{Anisotropy}

Many ferromagnetic materials have a crystalline structure. This
crystalline structure can penalize some directions of magnetization
and favor others. Anisotropy can be modeled by
\[
\mathrm{E}_{a}(\mathbf{m})=\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})\mathbf{m}(\mathbf{x}))\cdot\mathbf{m}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\]
where $\mathbf{K}$ is a positive symmetric matrix field.
The associated anisotropy operator is $\mathcal{H}_a(\mathbf{m})=-\mathbf{K}\mathbf{m}$.

\subsubsection{Maxwell}
This is the magnetic interaction that comes from Maxwell
equations. The constitutive relations in the ferromagnetic medium are given by:
\begin{gather*}
B=\mu_0(\mathbf{h}+\overline{\mathbf{m}}),\\
D=\varepsilon_0 \mathbf{e},
\end{gather*}
where $\overline{\mathbf{m}}$ is the extension of $\mathbf{m}$ by
zero outside $\Omega$, and where $\mu_0$ and $\varepsilon_0$
are the vacuum permeability and permittivity.

Starting from the Maxwell equations, the magnetic excitation $\mathbf{h}$
and the electric field
$\mathbf{e}$ are solutions to the following system:
\begin{gather*}
\mu_0\frac{\partial(\mathbf{h}+\overline{\mathbf{m}})}{\partial t}
+\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{e}=0,\\
\mu_0\frac{\partial\mathbf{e}}{\partial
  t}+\sigma(\mathbf{e}+\mathbf{f})\mathds{1}_\Omega-\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{h}=0,
\end{gather*}
where $\sigma\geq 0$ is the conductivity of the material and $f$ is a
source term modeling an applied electric field.


As these are evolution equations, initial conditions are needed to
complete the system.
The energy associated with the Maxwell interaction is
\[
\mathrm{E}_{\textrm{maxw}}(\mathbf{h},\mathbf{e})
=\frac{1}{2}\lVert\mathbf{h}\rVert^2_{\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)}
+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\lVert\mathbf{e}\rVert^2_{\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)}.
\]

We recall the Law of Faraday: $\operatorname{div} B=0$.
Here, the constitutive relation reads $B=\mu_0(\mathbf{h}+\overline{\mathbf{m}})$.
 Therefore, in order to satisfy the law of Faraday, we must assume that it
is satisfied at initial time. For positive times, by taking the divergence
of the first Maxwell's equation, we remark that the divergence free condition
 is propagated by the system.

\subsubsection{Volumic effective field}
The volumic effective field is the sum of the previous volumic contributions:
\begin{equation} \label{htotvol}
\mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}^{\mathrm{vol}}
=\mathbf{h}-\mathbf{K}\mathbf{m}+A\Delta\mathbf{m}.
\end{equation}


\subsection{Surface energies}
When a spacer is present inside a ferromagnetic material, new physical
phenomena may appear in the spacer. These phenomena are modeled
by surface energies, see Labrune and Miltat~\cite{Labrune.Miltat:wall.structure}.

\subsubsection{Super-exchange}
This surface energy penalizes the jump of the magnetization across the
spacer. It is modeled by a quadratic and a biquadratic term:
\begin{equation}\label{eq:SuperExchangeEnergy}
\mathrm{E}_{se}(\mathbf{m})=
\frac{J_1}{2}\int_\Gamma\lVert\gamma^+\mathbf{m}
-\gamma^-\mathbf{m}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})
+J_2\int_\Gamma\lVert\gamma^+\mathbf{m}\wedge \gamma^-\mathbf{m}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}
S(\hat{\mathbf{x}}).
\end{equation}
The magnetic excitation associated with super-exchange is:
\[
\mathcal{H}_{se}(\mathbf{m})=\Big(J_1(\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m}-\gamma\mathbf{m})
+2J_2\big((\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m}
-\lVert\gamma^*\mathbf{m}\rVert^2\gamma\mathbf{m}\big)\Big)
\,\mathrm{d} S(\Gamma^+\cup\Gamma^-),
\]
where $\gamma^*$ is defined in \S3.
Integration over $\,\mathrm{d} S(\Gamma^+\cup\Gamma^-)$ should be understood as
integrating over both faces of the surface $\Gamma$.

\subsubsection{Surface anisotropy}
Surface anisotropy penalizes magnetization that is orthogonal on the
boundary. In the micromagnetic model, it is modeled by a surface energy:
\begin{equation}\label{eq:SurfaceAnisotropyEnergy}
\begin{split}
\mathrm{E}_{sa}(\mathbf{m})&=\frac{K_s}{2}\int_{\Gamma^+}
\lVert\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})
+\frac{K_s}{2}\int_{\Gamma^-}\lVert\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu}
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\\
&=\frac{K_s}{2}\int_{\Gamma^\pm}\lVert\gamma\mathbf{m}
\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}}).
\end{split}
\end{equation}
The magnetic excitation associated with surface anisotropy is:
\[
\mathcal{H}_{sa}(\mathbf{m})=K_s\big((\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\boldsymbol{\nu})\boldsymbol{\nu}-\gamma\mathbf{m}\big)
\,\mathrm{d} S(\Gamma^+\cup\Gamma^-).
\]

\subsubsection{New boundary conditions}
Without surface energies, the standard boundary condition is the
homogenous Neumann condition. When surface energies are present,
the boundary conditions are the ones arising from the stationarity conditions
on the total magnetic energy:
\[
A\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial\boldsymbol{\nu}}=
K_s(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma\mathbf{m})\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu}
+J_1\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{m}
+2J_2(\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})
\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{m}
\]
on the interface $\Gamma^\pm$. A more convincing justification for
these boundary conditions is that they are the ones needed to recover
formally the energy inequality. These boundary conditions are
nonlinear.

\section{Landau-Lifshitz system}\label{sect:LandauLifshitzSystem}
We consider the following Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system:
\begin{subequations}
\begin{gather}
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}
=-\mathbf{m}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}^{\mathrm{vol}}
-\alpha\mathbf{m}\wedge (\mathbf{m}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}^{\mathrm{vol}})
\quad \text{in }\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega,\label{41a}\\
\mathbf{m}(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{m}_0\quad \text{in }\Omega,\\
\lVert\mathbf{m}\rVert=1\quad \text{in }\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega,\\
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial\boldsymbol{\nu}}
= 0\quad\text{on }\partial\Omega\setminus\Gamma^\pm,\\
\begin{split}
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial\boldsymbol{\nu}}
&= \frac{Ks}{A}(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma\mathbf{m})
		(\boldsymbol{\nu}-(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma\mathbf{m})\gamma\mathbf{m})
    +\frac{J_1}{A}(\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m}-
		(\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})
		\gamma\mathbf{m})				
\\& \phantom{=}
 	+2\frac{J_2}{A}(\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})
		(\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m}-
		(\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})
		\gamma\mathbf{m})
		 \quad\text{on }\mathbb{R}^+\times\Gamma^\pm,
\end{split}\label{eq:NeumannNonlinearConditions}
\end{gather}
\end{subequations}
where $\mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}^{\mathrm{vol}}$ is given by~\eqref{htotvol}
and $(\mathbf{e},\mathbf{h})$ is solution to Maxwell equations:
\begin{subequations}
\begin{gather}
\mu_0\frac{\partial(\overline{\mathbf{m}}+\mathbf{h})}{\partial t}
+\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{e}=0\quad\text{in }\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3,\\
\varepsilon_0\frac{\partial\mathbf{e}}{\partial t}
+\sigma(\mathbf{e}+\mathbf{f})\mathds{1}_\Omega-\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{h}
=0\quad \text{in }\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3,\\
\mathbf{e}(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{e}_0\quad \text{in }\mathbb{R}^3,\\
\mathbf{h}(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{h}_0\quad \text{in } \mathbb{R}^3.
\end{gather}
\end{subequations}

We first begin by defining the concept of weak solution to the
Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system with surface energies. This
concept of weak solutions is present
in \cite{Alouges.Soyeur:OnGlobal, Carbou.Fabrie:Time, labbe:mumag,
  Santugini:SolutionsLL}.
The key point is that the Landau-Lifshitz equation~\eqref{41a} is formally
equivalent to the following Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation:
  \[
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}-\alpha \mathbf{m} \wedge 
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial
  t}=-(1+\alpha^2)\mathbf{m}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{\mathrm{tot}}^{\mathrm{vol}},
\]
  which is more convenient to obtain the weak formulation defined as


\begin{definition}[Weak solutions to Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell with  
surface energies]
\label{defin:LLMaxwellWeak} \rm
\begin{subequations}
Let $\mathbf{m}$ be in $ \mathrm{L}^\infty(\rbrack 0,+\infty\lbrack;
\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega))$,  $\mathbf{e}$ and $\mathbf{h}$
 be in $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3))$.
We say that $(\mathbf{m}, \mathbf{e},\mathbf{h})$ is a weak solutions
to the Landau-Lifshitz Maxwell
system with surface energies if
\begin{enumerate}
\item $\lVert \mathbf{m}\rVert=1$ almost
everywhere in $\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega$.

\item $\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}\in
 \mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega)$.

\item For all $T>0$ and $\boldsymbol{\phi}$ in
$\mathbb{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$,
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationMagnetization}
\begin{split}
&\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}(t,\mathbf{x})\cdot
\boldsymbol{\phi}(t,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\\
&-\alpha\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\Big(\mathbf{m}(t,\mathbf{x})\wedge \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}
(t,\mathbf{x})\Big)
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}(t,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&
= (1+\alpha^2) A\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}\sum_{i=1}^3
	\Big(\mathbf{m}(t,\mathbf{x})\wedge \frac{\partial \mathbf{m}}{\partial x_i}
(t,\mathbf{x})\Big)
	\cdot\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\phi}}{\partial x_i}(t,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
 \\&\phantom{=}
+(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\left(\mathbf{m}(t,\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})\mathbf{m}(t,\mathbf{x})\right)		
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}(t,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\left(\mathbf{m}(t,\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{h}(t,\mathbf{x})\right)		
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}(t,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2)K_s\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack \times \Gamma^\pm}
	(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma\mathbf{m})(\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2)J_1\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Gamma^\pm}
	(\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} t		
\\&\phantom{=}
	-2(1+\alpha^2)J_2
		\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Gamma^\pm}
	(\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})(\gamma\mathbf{m}\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} t.
\end{split}
\end{equation}

\item In the sense of traces,
$\mathbf{m}(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{m}_0$.

\item For all $\boldsymbol{\psi}$ in
$\mathcal{C}^\infty_c(\lbrack0,+\infty\lbrack\times\mathbb{R}^3;\mathbb{R}^3)$:
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationExcitation}
\begin{aligned}
&-\mu_0\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}(\mathbf{h}+\mathbf{m})\cdot
\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\psi}}{\partial t}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}\cdot\operatorname{curl}\boldsymbol{\psi}
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\ &=
\mu_0\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}(\mathbf{h}_0+\mathbf{m}_0)\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}_0
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\end{aligned}
\end{equation}

\item For all $\boldsymbol{\Theta}$ in
$\mathcal{C}^\infty_c(\lbrack0,+\infty\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3;\mathbb{R}^3)$:
\begin{equation} \label{eq:WeakFormulationElectric}
\begin{aligned}
&-\varepsilon_0\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}\cdot
\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\Theta}}{\partial t}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
-\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{h}\cdot
\operatorname{curl}\boldsymbol{\Theta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\\
&+\sigma\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega}(\mathbf{e}+\mathbf{f})
\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta}
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\
&= \varepsilon_0\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_0\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta}_0
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\end{aligned}
\end{equation}

\item The following energy inequality holds for almost all $T>0$,
\begin{equation}\label{eq:EnergyInequality}
\begin{split}
&\mathrm{E}(\mathbf{m}(T),\mathbf{h}(T),\mathbf{e}(T))
 +\frac{\alpha}{1+\alpha^2}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
 \lVert \frac{\partial \mathbf{m}}{\partial t}\rVert^2 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\,\mathrm{d} t\\
&+\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}\int_0^T\lVert\mathbf{e}
\rVert^2_{\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}\,\mathrm{d} t+
\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0} \iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\mathbf{e}\cdot\mathbf{f}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} t \\
&\leq \mathrm{E}(\mathbf{m}_0,\mathbf{h}_0,\mathbf{e}_0),
\end{split}
\end{equation}
where
\begin{align*}
\mathrm{E}(\mathbf{m},\mathbf{h},\mathbf{e})
&=\frac{A}{2}\int_\Omega\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})\mathbf{m}(\mathbf{x}))
 \cdot\mathbf{m}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\\
&\phantom{=}+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{e}(\mathbf{x})\rVert^2
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{h}(\mathbf{x})\rVert^2
+\frac{K_s}{2}\int_{\Gamma^+\cup\Gamma^-}\lVert\gamma^+\mathbf{m}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} S(\mathbf{x})
\\
&\phantom{=}
+\frac{J_1}{2}\int_\Gamma\lVert\gamma^+\mathbf{m}-\gamma^-\mathbf{m}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+J_2\int_\Gamma\lVert\gamma^+\mathbf{m}\wedge \gamma^-\mathbf{m}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\end{align*}
\end{enumerate}
\end{subequations}
\end{definition}

Our first result states the existence of a global in time weak solution to the
 Laudau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system.

\begin{theorem}\label{theo:ExistenceWeakLandauLifshitzMaxwellSurfaceEnergies}
Let $\mathbf{m}_0$ be in $\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$ such that
$\lVert\mathbf{m}_0\rVert=1$ almost everywhere in $\Omega$. Let
$\mathbf{h}_0$ and $\mathbf{e}_0$ be in $\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$. Let $\mathbf{f}$
be in $\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega)$.
Suppose $\operatorname{div}(\mathbf{h}_0+\overline{\mathbf{m}_0})=0$ in $\mathbb{R}^3$, where
$\overline{\mathbf{m}_0}$ is the extension of $\mathbf{m}_0$ by $0$ outside $\Omega$.
Then, there exists at least one weak solution to
the Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system in the sense of
Definition~\ref{defin:LLMaxwellWeak}.
\end{theorem}

Uniqueness is unlikely as the solution is not unique when only the
exchange energy is present, see~\cite{Alouges.Soyeur:OnGlobal}.
In our second result we characterize the $\omega$-limit set of
a trajectory. The definition is the following.


\begin{definition} \label{defomega} \rm
Let $(\mathbf{m},\mathbf{h},\mathbf{e})$ be a weak solution of the
Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system given by Theorem
\ref{theo:ExistenceWeakLandauLifshitzMaxwellSurfaceEnergies}.
We call $\omega$-limit set of this trajectory the set:
\begin{align*}
&\omega(\mathbf{m},\mathbf{h},\mathbf{e})\\
&=\big\{ v\in \mathbb{H}^1(\Omega), \exists (t_n)_n, \; \lim_{n\to
+\infty} t_n=+\infty, \; \mathbf{m}(t_n,\cdot)\rightharpoonup v
\text{ weakly  in } \mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)\big\}.
\end{align*}
\end{definition}

We remark that $m\in \mathrm{L}^\infty(\rbrack0,+\infty\lbrack;\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega))$
so that $\omega(\mathbf{m},\mathbf{h},\mathbf{e}) $ is non empty.

\begin{theorem} \label{theo-omegalim}
Let $(\mathbf{m},\mathbf{e},\mathbf{h})$ be a weak solution of the
Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system given by Theorem
\ref{theo:ExistenceWeakLandauLifshitzMaxwellSurfaceEnergies}.
Let $\mathbf{u}\in \omega(\mathbf{m},\mathbf{h},\mathbf{e})$. Then
$\mathbf{u}$ satisfies:
\begin{enumerate}
\item $\mathbf{u}\in \mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$, $\lVert \mathbf{u}\rVert =1$
almost everywhere,

\item for all $\boldsymbol{\varphi}\in \mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$,
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationMagnetizationOmega}
\begin{split}
0&=
 A\int_{\Omega}\sum_{i=1}^3
	\Big(\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\wedge \frac{\partial
\mathbf{u}}{\partial x_i}(\mathbf{x})\Big)
	\cdot\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\varphi}}{\partial x_i}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\int_{\Omega}\
	\left(\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})
\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\right)		
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&\phantom{=}
-\int_{\Omega}
	\left(\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{H}(\mathbf{x})\right)		
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}				
-K_s\int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma\mathbf{u})(\gamma\mathbf{u}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})				
\\&\phantom{=}
-J_1\int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\gamma\mathbf{u}\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})		
\\&\phantom{=}
	-2J_2 \int_{\Gamma^\pm}
	(\gamma\mathbf{u}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{u})(\gamma\mathbf{u}
\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{u})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}}).
\end{split}
\end{equation}

\item $\mathbf{H}$ is deduced from $\mathbf{u}$ by the relations:
\begin{equation}
\label{hdem}
\operatorname{div} (\mathbf{H} +\overline{ \mathbf{u}})=0 \text{ and }\operatorname{curl} \mathbf{H} =0
\quad \text{in }\mathcal{D}'(\mathbb{R}^3).
\end{equation}
\end{enumerate}
\end{theorem}

\begin{remark} \rm
Equation~\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationMagnetizationOmega} is the weak formulation
of the following problem:
\begin{gather*}
 \mathbf{u} \wedge  \left( A\Delta \mathbf{u}-\mathbf{K} \mathbf{u}
+ \mathbf{H}\right)=0 \quad \text{in } \Omega, \\
\text{ where $ \mathbf{H}$, called the demagnetizing field, satisfies \eqref{hdem},}
\\
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial\boldsymbol{\nu}}= 0\quad\text{on }
\partial\Omega\setminus\Gamma^\pm,\\
\begin{split}
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial\boldsymbol{\nu}}
&= \frac{Ks}{A}(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma\mathbf{m})
		(\boldsymbol{\nu}-(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma\mathbf{m})\gamma\mathbf{m})
+\frac{J_1}{A}(\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m}-
		(\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})
		\gamma\mathbf{m})				
\\&\phantom{=}
 	+2\frac{J_2}{A}(\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})
		(\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m}-
		(\gamma\mathbf{m}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{m})
		\gamma\mathbf{m})
		 \quad\text{on }\mathbb{R}^+\times\Gamma^\pm,
\end{split}
\end{gather*}
\end{remark}



\section{Technical prerequisite results on Sobolev Spaces}\label{sect:prerequisites}

In this section, we remind the reader about some useful previously
known results on Sobolev Spaces that we use in this paper. In the
whole section $\mathcal{O}$ is any bounded open set of $\mathbb{R}^3$,
regular enough for the usual embeddings result to hold. For example,
it is enough that $\mathcal{O}$
satisfy the cone property, see\cite[\S4.3]{Adams:SobolevSpaces}.

We start with Aubin's lemma~\cite{Aubin:TheoremeCompacite},
as extended in \cite[Corollary 4]{Simon:CompactSets}.

\begin{lemma}[Aubin's lemma]\label{lemma:AubinSimon}
Let $X\Subset B\subset Y$ be Banach spaces. Let $F$ be bounded
in $\mathrm{L}^p(\rbrack0,T\lbrack;X)$. Suppose $\{\partial_tu, u\in F\}$
is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^r(\rbrack0,T\lbrack;Y)$. Suppose for all $t$,
\begin{itemize}
\item If $r\geq 1$ and $1\leq p<+\infty$, then $F$ is a compact subset
of $\mathrm{L}^p(\rbrack0,T\lbrack;B)$.

\item If $r>1$ and $p=+\infty$, then $F$ is a compact subset of
$\mathcal{C}(0,T;B)$.
\end{itemize}
\end{lemma}

\begin{lemma}\label{lemma:compactCL2imbedding}
For all $T>0$, the imbedding from $\mathrm{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathcal{O})$
to $\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack,\mathrm{L}^2(\mathcal{O}))$ is compact.
\end{lemma}
\begin{proof}
Use the Aubin's lemma, see~\cite[Corollary 4]{Simon:CompactSets},
extended to the case $p=+\infty$, with
$X=\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$ and  $B=Y=\mathrm{L}^2(\Omega)$.
\end{proof}

\begin{lemma}
Let $u$ be in $\mathrm{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathcal{O})\cap
\mathrm{L}^\infty(\rbrack0,T\lbrack;\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O}))$.
Then $u$ belongs to
$\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack;\mathbb{H}^1_\omega(\mathcal{O}))$
where $\mathrm{H}_\omega^1(\mathcal{O})$ is the space
 $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$ but with the weak topology.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
The function $u$ belongs to
$\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack,\mathrm{L}^2(\mathcal{O}))$.
Let now $(t_n)_n$ be a sequence in $\lbrack0,T\rbrack$ converging to $t$. Then,
$u(t_n,\cdot)$ converges to
$u(t,\cdot)$ in $\mathrm{L}^2(\mathcal{O})$. Also, the sequence
$(u(t_n,\cdot))_{n\in\mathbb{N}}$ is bounded in
$\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$, therefore from any subsequence of
$(u(t_n,\cdot))_{n\in\mathbb{N}}$, one can extract a subsequence
that converges weakly in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$.
The only possible limit is $u(t,\cdot)$  therefore the whole sequence
converges weakly in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$.
\end{proof}

\begin{lemma}\label{lemma:SameSubsequenceGivenTime}
Let $(u_n)_{n\in\mathbb{N}}$ be bounded in
$\mathrm{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathcal{O})$ and in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\rbrack0,T\lbrack;\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O}))$. Let
$(u_{n_k})_{k\in\mathbb{N}}$
be a subsequence which converges weakly to
some $u$ in $\mathrm{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathcal{O})$. Then, for all $t$ in
$\lbrack0,T\rbrack$, the same subsequence $u_{n_k}(t,\cdot)$ converges weakly to
$u(t,\cdot)$ in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
For all $t$ in $\lbrack0,T\rbrack$, $u_{n_k}(t,\cdot)$ converges strongly
to $u(t,\cdot)$ in $\mathrm{L}^2(\mathcal{O})$. Therefore, any subsequence
$u_{n_{k_j}}(t,\cdot)$ that converges weakly in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$ has
$u(t,\cdot)$ for limit. Since $u_{n_k}(t,\cdot)$ is bounded
in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$, from any subsequence of $u_{n_k}(t,\cdot)$, one
can extract a further subsequence  that converges weakly in
$\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$, therefore, for all $t$ in $\lbrack0,T\rbrack$,
the whole subsequence $u_{n_k}(t,\cdot)$
converges weakly to $u(t,\cdot)$ in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathcal{O})$.
\end{proof}

\section{Proof of Theorem \ref{theo:ExistenceWeakLandauLifshitzMaxwellSurfaceEnergies}}
\label{sect:proofExistenceWeakLLMSurfaceEnergies}

\subsection{Main idea of the proof}
We proceed as in \cite{Carbou.Fabrie:Time}
and~\cite{Santugini:SolutionsLL} and combine the ideas of both
papers.
We start by extending the surface energies to
a thin layer of thickness $2\eta>0$.

As in \cite{Santugini:SolutionsLL}, let 
$\mathcal{I}_{\eta}=\rbrack-L^-,-\eta\lbrack \cup \rbrack \eta,L^+\lbrack$.
We consider the operator
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
\mathcal{H}_s^\eta:\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega) \cap \mathbb{L}^\infty(\Omega)
\to\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega) \cap \mathbb{L}^\infty(\Omega)\\
\mathbf{m}\mapsto\frac{1}{2\eta}\begin{cases}
	0&\text{in } \mathbb{R}^3\setminus({B}\times (\mathcal{I}
\setminus \mathcal{I}_{\eta})),	
\\[4pt]
2K_s((\mathbf{m}\cdot\boldsymbol{\nu})\boldsymbol{\nu}-\mathbf{m})+2J_1(\mathbf{m}^{*}
-\mathbf{m})\\
+4J_2\big((\mathbf{m}\cdot\mathbf{m}^{*})\mathbf{m}^{*}
		-\lVert\mathbf{m}^{*}\rVert^2\mathbf{m}\big)
&\text{in }{B}\times (\mathcal{I}
		\setminus \mathcal{I}_{\eta}),
	\end{cases}
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
where $\mathbf{m}^*$ is the reflection of $\mathbf{m}$, \textit{i.e.}
$\mathbf{m}^*(x,y,z,t)=\mathbf{m}(x,y,-z,t)$, see
Figure~\ref{fig:boundarylayer}.

\begin{figure}[ht]
\begin{center}
\begin{tikzpicture}[scale=0.8]
\draw (0,-2) rectangle (5,2);
\fill[lightgray] (0,0) rectangle (5, 0.2) ;
\fill[lightgray] (0,0) rectangle (5,-0.2) ;
\draw (0,0) -- (5,0);
\draw[<->] (5.2,-0.2) -- (5.2, 0.2);
\node at (5.4,0) {$\eta$};
\end{tikzpicture}
\caption{Artificial boundary layer}\label{fig:boundarylayer}
\end{center}
\end{figure}

The associated energy is:
\begin{equation}
\begin{split}
\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m})
&=\frac{K_s}{2\eta}
\int_{{B}\times (\mathcal{I}\setminus\mathcal{I}_{\eta})}
\left(\lVert\mathbf{m}\rVert^2-(\mathbf{m}\cdot\boldsymbol{\nu})^2\right)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\\
&\phantom{=}+\frac{J_1}{2\eta}
\int_{{B}\times (\mathcal{I}\setminus\mathcal{I}_{\eta})}
\Big(\frac{\lVert \mathbf{m}\rVert^2+\lVert \mathbf{m}^{*}\rVert^2}{2}
-(\mathbf{m}\cdot\mathbf{m}^{*})\Big)	\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\\
&\phantom{=}+\frac{J_2}{2\eta}				
\int_{{B}\times \mathcal{I}\setminus\mathcal{I}_{\eta}}
\left(\lVert\mathbf{m}^{*}\rVert^2\lVert\mathbf{m}\rVert^2
-(\mathbf{m}\cdot\mathbf{m}^{*})^2\right)	\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\end{split}
\end{equation}
This energy will replace the surface
terms~\eqref{eq:SuperExchangeEnergy}
and~\eqref{eq:SurfaceAnisotropyEnergy}.
We consider the doubly penalized problem:
\begin{subequations}\label{subeq:PenalizedLL}
\begin{gather}
\begin{aligned}
\alpha\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}
+\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}
&= (1+\alpha^2)(A\Delta\mathbf{m}-\mathbf{K}\mathbf{m}
 +\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}+\mathcal{H}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}))
\\&\phantom{=}
-k(1+\alpha^2)((\lVert\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\rVert^2-1)\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}),
\end{aligned}\\
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial\boldsymbol{\nu}}=0 \quad
\text{on }\partial\Omega,\\
\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta} (0,\cdot)=\mathbf{m}_0,
\end{gather}
\end{subequations}
with Maxwell equations:
\begin{subequations}
\begin{gather}
\varepsilon_0\frac{\partial\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}
+\sigma(\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}+\mathbf{f})\mathds{1}_\Omega-\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}=0,\\
\mu_0\frac{\partial(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}+\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta})}{\partial t}
+\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}=0,\\
\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta} (0,\cdot)=\mathbf{e}_0,\\
\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta} (0,\cdot)=\mathbf{h}_0.
\end{gather}
\end{subequations}

The idea is to prove the existence of weak solutions to the penalized problem via
Galerkin, then have $k$ tend to $+\infty$ to satisfy the local norm
constraint on the magnetization, then have $\eta$ tend to $0$ to transform
the homogenous Neumann
boundary condition into the nonlinear condition~\eqref{eq:NeumannNonlinearConditions}.

\subsection{First Step of Galerkin's method}
As in \cite{Alouges.Soyeur:OnGlobal} we consider the eigenvectors
$(v_j)_{j\geq1}$ of the Laplace operator
with Neumann homogenous conditions. This basis is, up to a
renormalisation, an Hilbertian basis for the spaces
$\mathrm{L}^2(\Omega)$, $\mathrm{H}^1(\Omega)$, and
 $\{{u}\in \mathrm{H}^2(\Omega),\frac{\partial{u}}{\partial\boldsymbol{\nu}}=0\}$. The
 eigenvectors $v_k$ all belong to $\mathcal{C}^\infty(\overline{\Omega})$.
We call $V_n$ the space spanned by $(v_j)_{1\leq j\leq n}$.
As in \cite{Carbou.Fabrie:Time}, we
consider an Hilbertian basis $(\mathbf{\omega}_j)_{j\geq1}$ of
$\mathrm{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3;\mathbb{R}^3)$ such that every $\mathbf{\omega}_j$ belongs
to $\mathcal{C}^\infty_c(\mathbb{R}^3;\mathbb{R}^3)$.
We call $W_n$ the space spanned by $(\mathbf{\omega}_j)_{0\leq j\leq n}$.


 Set $n\geq1$, $\eta>0$ and $k>0$.
We search for
$\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$ in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;(V_n)^3)$,
$\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}$ in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;W_n)$, and
$\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}$ in $\mathrm{H}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;W_n)$
such that
\begin{subequations}\label{subeq:EqDiffmhenketa}
\begin{equation}
 \begin{split}
\alpha\frac{\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\,\mathrm{d} t}
&=-\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}\wedge  \frac{\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\,\mathrm{d} t})
\\&\phantom{=} +(1+\alpha^2)\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(A\Delta\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}-\mathbf{K}\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta})
\\&\phantom{=}
 +(1+\alpha^2)\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}
+\mathcal{H}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}))
\\&\phantom{=}
 -(1+\alpha^2)k\mathcal{P}_{V_n}((\lVert\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}\rVert^2-1)\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}),
 \end{split}
\end{equation}
and
\begin{equation}
\mu_0\frac{\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}}{\,\mathrm{d} t}
=-\mu_0\mathcal{P}_{W_n}\Big(\frac{\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\,\mathrm{d} t}\Big)
+\mathcal{P}_{W_n}(\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}).
\end{equation}
and
\begin{equation}
\varepsilon_0\frac{\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}}{\,\mathrm{d} t}
=-\mathcal{P}_{W_n}(\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta})
-\mathcal{P}_{W_n}(\mathds{1}_\Omega(\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}+\mathbf{f})),
\end{equation}
\end{subequations}
with the initial conditions:
\begin{subequations}\label{subeq:EqDiffCondInitmhenketa}
\begin{gather}
\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(0,\cdot)=\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0),\\
\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}(0,\cdot)=\mathcal{P}_{W_n}(\mathbf{h}_0),\\
\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}(0,\cdot)=\mathcal{P}_{W_n}(\mathbf{e}_0),
\end{gather}
\end{subequations}
where $\mathcal{P}_{V_n}$ is the orthogonal projection on $(V_n)^3$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$ and $\mathcal{P}_{W_n}$ is the orthogonal projection
on $W_n$ in $\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$.
Let $\mathbf{a}(t)=(\mathbf{a}_i(t))_{1\leq  i\leq n}$,
$\mathbf{b}(t)=(b_i(t))_{1\leq i\leq n}$ and $\mathbf{c}(t)=(c_i(t))_{1\leq
  i\leq n}$ be the coefficients of $\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(t,\cdot)$,
$\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}(t,\cdot)$ and $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}(t,\cdot)$
in the decomposition
\[
\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(t,\cdot)=\sum_{i=1}^n\mathbf{a_i}(t)v_i,\quad
\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}(t,\cdot)=\sum_{i=1}^nb_i(t)\mathbf{\omega}_i,\quad
\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}(t,\cdot)=\sum_{i=1}^nc_i(t)\mathbf{\omega}_i.
\]
Then, System~\eqref{subeq:EqDiffmhenketa} is equivalent to
\begin{subequations}\label{subeq:EqDiffmhenketaCoeffABC}
\begin{gather}
\frac{\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{a}}{\,\mathrm{d} t}
+\boldsymbol{\phi}(\mathbf{a},\frac{\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{a}}{\,\mathrm{d} t})
=F_{\mathbf{m}}(\mathbf{a},\mathbf{b}),\\
\frac{\,\mathrm{d}(\mathbf{b}+L\mathbf{a})}{\,\mathrm{d}  t}
=F_{\mathbf{h}}(\mathbf{c}),\\
\frac{\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{c}}{\,\mathrm{d} t}
=F_{\mathbf{e}}(\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta},\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta})+\mathbf{f}^*,
\end{gather}
\end{subequations}
where $L$ is linear, $F_{\mathbf{m}}$, $F_{\mathbf{h}}$ and $F_{\mathbf{e}}$
are polynomial thus of class $\mathcal{C}^\infty$, and $\mathbf{f}^*$ is in
$\mathrm{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{R}^n)$.
These are supplemented by initial conditions
\begin{equation} \label{eq:EqDiffCondInitmnketaCoeffABC}
\mathbf{a}(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{a}_0,\quad
\mathbf{b}(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{b}_0,\quad
\mathbf{c}(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{c}_0,
\end{equation}
where $\mathbf{a}_0$, $\mathbf{b}_0$, and $\mathbf{c}_0$ are obtained
from \eqref{subeq:EqDiffCondInitmhenketa}.
As $\boldsymbol{\phi}(\cdot,\cdot)$ is bilinear
continuous and $\boldsymbol{\phi}(\mathbf{a},\cdot)$ is
antisymmetric, the linear application
$\mathrm{Id}-\boldsymbol{\phi}(\mathbf{a},\cdot)$ is invertible.
Therefore, by the Carath\'eorody theorem,
System \eqref{subeq:EqDiffmhenketaCoeffABC} has local
solutions with initial conditions~\eqref{eq:EqDiffCondInitmnketaCoeffABC}.
Therefore, there exists  $T^*>0$ and $\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$ in
$\mathrm{H}^1(\rbrack0,T^*\lbrack;(V_n)^3)$, $\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}$ in
$\mathrm{H}^1(\rbrack0,T^*\lbrack;W_n)$
and $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}$ in $\mathrm{H}^1(\rbrack0,T^*\lbrack;W_n)$  that
satisfy~\eqref{subeq:EqDiffmhenketa}
and~\eqref{subeq:EqDiffCondInitmhenketa}.

Multiplying~\eqref{subeq:EqDiffmhenketa} by test functions and
integrating by part yields:
\begin{subequations}\label{subeq:WeakFormulationGalerkin}
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinMagnetization}
\begin{split}
&\alpha\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\Big(\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}\wedge \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}
    \Big)	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&=
-(1+\alpha^2) A\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}\sum_{i=1}^3
	\frac{\partial \mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial x_i}\cdot\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\phi}}{\partial x_i}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
 \\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}(
 	\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x}) \mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(\mathbf{x}))
 	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\phantom{=}
+(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2)k\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}(\lVert\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}\rVert^2-1)\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\phantom{=}
        +(1+\alpha^2)\frac{K_s}{\eta}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
        ((\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta})\boldsymbol{\nu}-\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\&\phantom{=}
+(1+\alpha^2) \frac{ J_1}{\eta}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}^{*}_{n,k,\eta}-\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta})\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t		
\\&\phantom{=}
	+2(1+\alpha^2)\frac{J_2}{\eta}
		\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	\Big((\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}^{*})
 \mathbf{m}^{*}_{n,k,\eta}
\\&\phantom{=}\quad
      -\lVert\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}^*\rVert^2\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}\Big)
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t,
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\boldsymbol{\phi}$  in $\mathcal{C}^\infty(\lbrack0,T^*\rbrack,V_n^3)$. And
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinExcitation}
\begin{split}
&\mathrm{\mu}_0\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}
\Big(\frac{\partial\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}+
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}\Big)\cdot
\boldsymbol{\psi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t \\
&+\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}
\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t=0,
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\boldsymbol{\psi}$
in $\mathcal{C}^\infty(\lbrack0,T^*\rbrack,W_n)$. And
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinElectric}
\begin{split}
&\mathrm{\varepsilon}_0\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}
 \frac{\partial\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial
    t}\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
-\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}
\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta} \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\
&+\sigma\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}(\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}
+\mathbf{f})\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t=0,
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\boldsymbol{\Theta}$ in
 $\mathcal{C}_c^\infty(\lbrack0,T^*\rbrack,W_n)$.

By density, \eqref{subeq:WeakFormulationGalerkin} also
holds if  $\boldsymbol{\phi}$ belongs to the space $\mathrm{L}^2(\rbrack0,T^*\lbrack;V_n^3)$,
$\boldsymbol{\psi}$ belongs to $\mathrm{L}^2(\rbrack0,T^*\lbrack,W_n)$, and
$\boldsymbol{\Theta}$ belongs to $\mathrm{L}^2(\rbrack0,T^*\lbrack,W_n)$.
\end{subequations}
As in \cite{Carbou.Fabrie:Time}, set
$\boldsymbol{\phi}=\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}$
in \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinMagnetization},
we obtain
\begin{align*}
&\frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}
(T,\mathbf{x}))\cdot\mathbf{m}(T,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\
&+\frac{k}{4}\int_{\Omega}(\lVert\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x}))
\rVert^2-1)^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
-\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}\cdot
\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\ &
+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot))
+\frac{\alpha}{1+\alpha^2}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\lVert\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}\rVert^2 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\\
&\leq
\frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0)\rVert^2\,
\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x}) 
\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0))\cdot\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0)
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\ 
&\phantom{=}
+\frac{k}{4}\int_{\Omega}(\lVert \mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0))
\rVert^2-1)^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0)).
\end{align*}
Set $\boldsymbol{\psi}=\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}$ in
\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinExcitation}, we obtain
\begin{align*}
&\frac{\mathrm{\mu}_0}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})\rVert^2 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\mu_0\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}\cdot
\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&
+\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}\cdot\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\& \leq \frac{\mathrm{\mu}_0}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}
\lVert\mathcal{P}_{W_n}(\mathbf{h}_0)\rVert^2 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x},
\end{align*}
Set $\boldsymbol{\Theta}=\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}$ in
\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinElectric}, we obtain
\begin{align*}
&\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2}\iint_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot)
 \rVert^2
-\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}\cdot\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&
+\sigma\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\sigma\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{f}\cdot
\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\leq
\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2}\iint_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathcal{P}_{W_N}(\mathbf{e}_0)\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\end{align*}

Combining these three inequalities, we get an energy inequality
\begin{equation}\label{eq:EnergyInequalityGalerkin}
\begin{split}
&\mathrm{E}_{n,k,\eta}(T)+\frac{\alpha}{1+\alpha^2}
 \iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}\lVert\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial
    t}\rVert^2 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t+\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}
\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\
&+\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}
\mathbf{f}\cdot\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\
&\leq
\frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0)
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x}) \mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0))
\cdot\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&\phantom{=}
+\frac{k}{4}\int_{\Omega}(\lVert \mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0)\rVert^2-1)^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathcal{P}_{V_n}(\mathbf{m}_0))
\\&\phantom{=}
+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathcal{P}_{W_N}(\mathbf{e}_0)\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathcal{P}_{W_N}(\mathbf{h}_0)\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\end{split}
\end{equation}
with
\begin{align*}
\mathrm{E}_{n,k,\eta}(T)
&=\frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot)
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}
(T,\mathbf{x}))\cdot\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\ &\phantom{=}
+\frac{k}{4}\int_{\Omega}(\lVert\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x}))
\rVert^2-1)^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\ &\phantom{=}
+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{e}_{n,k,
\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\ &\phantom{=}
+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot))
\end{align*}

The projection $\mathcal{P}_n(\mathbf{m}_0)$ converges to $\mathbf{m}_0$
in $\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$ and in $\mathbb{L}^6(\Omega)$
by Sobolev imbedding.
The terms on the right hand-side remain bounded independently of
$n$. The last term on the left hand-side may be dealt with by Young
inequality. Thus,  $\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$, $\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}$ and $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}$
cannot explode in finite time and exist globally.

\subsection{Final step of Galerkin's method}\label{subsect:nLimit}

We now  have $n$ tend to $+\infty$
By \eqref{eq:EnergyInequalityGalerkin} and using Young inequality to
deal with the term containing $\mathbf{f}$:
\begin{itemize}
\item $\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$  is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^4(\Omega))$ independently of $n$.

\item $\nabla \mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$ is bounded in
 $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently of $n$.

\item $\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}$ is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently of $n$.

\item $\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}$  is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently of $n$.

\item $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}$  is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently of $n$.
\end{itemize}
Thus, there exist $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ in the space
$\mathrm{H}_{loc}^1(\lbrack0,+\infty\lbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))\cap
\mathrm{L}^\infty(\rbrack0,+\infty\lbrack;\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega))$,
$\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}$ in the space
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$,
$\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}$ in the space $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$,
such that up to a subsequence:
\begin{itemize}
\item $\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$ converges weakly to $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ in
 $\mathbb{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$ converges strongly to $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$ converges strongly to $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ in
$\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ and  in
$\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p(\Omega))$ for all $1\leq
p<6$. See Lemma~\ref{lemma:AubinSimon}.

\item $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}$ converges weakly to $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$
 in $\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item For all time $T$, $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$ converges
  weakly to $\nabla \mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$. The same subsequence can be used for all time
$T\geq 0$, see Lemma~\ref{lemma:SameSubsequenceGivenTime}.

\item $\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{n,k,\eta}}{\partial t}$ converges weakly to
  $\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^{2}(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}$ converges star weakly to $\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}$
in $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.

\item $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}$ converges star weakly to $\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}$
in $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.
\end{itemize}

Taking the limit in the energy
inequality \eqref{eq:EnergyInequalityGalerkin} as $n$ tend to
$+\infty$ is tricky:  the terms
involving the $\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$ norm of $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$ and
$\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$ are tricky. For all $T>0$, we can extract
a subsequence of $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$ that converges weakly to
$\mathbf{e}^T_{k,\eta}$  in $\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$ as $n$ tends to $+\infty$. The
tricky part is that it is unproven
that $\mathbf{e}^T_{k,\eta}$ is equal to $\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$. If we
had strong convergence of $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}$ as a function defined on
$\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega$ or if we had the
existence of a subsequence along which $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$
converged weakly in $\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$ for almost all time $T$, then we
could conclude directly.  Unfortunately, while we have for all $T>0$,
the existence of a subsequence of $\mathbf{e}_{n,k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$ that
converges weakly in $\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$, the subsequence depends on $T$.
We have the same problem for $\mathbf{h}_{n,k,\eta}$.  There is no such
problem with $\mathbf{m}(T,\cdot)$,
see Lemma~\ref{lemma:SameSubsequenceGivenTime}. To solve the problem,
we first integrate~\eqref{eq:EnergyInequalityGalerkin} over $\rbrack
T_1,T_2\lbrack$ where $0\leq T_1<T_2<+\infty$ then we can
take the limit as $n$ tend to $+\infty$:
\begin{align*}
&\int_{T_1}^{T_2}\Big(\frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}
 (T,\cdot)\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})
 \mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x}))\cdot\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}
 (T,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&
+\frac{k}{4}\int_{\Omega}(\lVert\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})
 \rVert^2-1)^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}
(T,\mathbf{x})\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\cdot))
+\frac{\alpha}{1+\alpha^2}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\lVert\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial
    t}\rVert^2 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&
+\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}
\lVert\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}
\mathbf{f}\cdot\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\Big)dT
\\&\leq (T_2-T_1)\mathcal{E}_0^\eta,
\end{align*}
for all $0\leq T_1<T_2<+\infty$,  where
\begin{align*}
\mathcal{E}_0^{\eta}
&= \frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}_0\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x}) \mathbf{m}_0)
\cdot\mathbf{m}_0\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_0)
+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}
\lVert\mathbf{e}_0\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\
 &\phantom{=}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{h}_0\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\end{align*}
Since the equality holds for all
$T_1$ and $T_2$, we have that for almost all $T>0$,
\begin{equation}\label{eq:EnergyInequalityPenalized}
\begin{split}
&\frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}
(T,\mathbf{x}))\cdot\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&
+\frac{k}{4}\int_{\Omega}(\lVert\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})
\rVert^2-1)^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}
\lVert\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}
(T,\mathbf{x})\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\cdot))
+\frac{\alpha}{1+\alpha^2}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
 \lVert\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial
    t} \rVert^2 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\\
& +\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}
 \lVert\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{f}
\cdot\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\leq
\mathcal{E}_0^\eta.
\end{split}
\end{equation}

We take the limit in \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinMagnetization}
as $n$ tends to $+\infty$:
\begin{subequations}\label{subeq:WeakFormulationPenalized}
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationPenalizedMagnetization}
\begin{split}
&\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\alpha\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}
 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\Big(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}\Big)
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\ &=
-(1+\alpha^2) A\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}\sum_{i=1}^3
	\frac{\partial \mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial x_i}\cdot
\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\phi}}{\partial x_i}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
 \\ &\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x}) \mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(t,\mathbf{x}))
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}(t,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\ &\phantom{=}
+(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\ &\phantom{=}
        +(1+\alpha^2)\frac{K_s}{\eta}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack
\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
        ((\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta})\boldsymbol{\nu}-\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\ &\phantom{=}
+(1+\alpha^2) \frac{ J_1}{\eta}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack
-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}	(\mathbf{m}^{*}_{k,\eta}-\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta})\cdot
\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t		
\\ &\phantom{=}
	+2(1+\alpha^2)\frac{J_2}{\eta}
		\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	\Big((\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}^{*})\mathbf{m}^{*}_{n,k,\eta}
\\ &\phantom{=}\quad
        -\lVert\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}^*\rVert^2\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\Big)
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\phi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t,
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\boldsymbol{\phi}$ in $\bigcup_n\mathcal{C}^\infty(\lbrack0,T\lbrack;V_n^3)$. By
density, it also holds for all $\boldsymbol{\phi}$ in
$\mathbb{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

We integrate \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinExcitation} by parts then
take the limit as
$n$ tends to $+\infty$.
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationPenalizedExcitation}
\begin{split}
&-\mathrm{\mu}_0\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\left(\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}+
\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\right)) \frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\psi}}{\partial t}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}\cdot\operatorname{curl}\boldsymbol{\psi}
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\\
&=\mathrm{\mu}_0\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\left(\mathbf{h}_{0}+
\mathbf{m}_{0}\right))\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(0,\cdot)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x},
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\boldsymbol{\psi}$ in $\bigcup_n\mathcal{C}_c^\infty
(\lbrack0,+\infty\lbrack;W_n)$. By
density, it also holds for all $\boldsymbol{\psi}$ in
$\mathrm{L}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega))$ such that
$\frac{\partial \boldsymbol{\psi}}{\partial t}$ belongs to
$\mathrm{L}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.

We integrate \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationGalerkinElectric} by parts then take
the limit as $n$ tends to $+\infty$.
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationPenalizedElectric}
\begin{split}
&
-\mathrm{\varepsilon}_0\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}\cdot
\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\Theta}}
{\partial  t}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
-\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}\cdot
 \operatorname{curl}\boldsymbol{\Theta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&
+\sigma\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega}(\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}
+\mathbf{f})\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&=
\mathrm{\varepsilon}_0\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_{0}
\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta}(0,\cdot)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x},
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\boldsymbol{\Theta}$ in $\bigcup_n\mathcal{C}_c^\infty
(\lbrack0,+\infty\lbrack;W_n)$. By
density, it also holds for all $\boldsymbol{\Theta}$ in \\
$\mathrm{L}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega))$ such that
$\frac{\partial \boldsymbol{\Theta}}{\partial t}$ belongs to
$\mathrm{L}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.
\end{subequations}

\subsection{Limit as $k$ tends to $+\infty$}\label{subsect:kLimit}
By \eqref{eq:EnergyInequalityPenalized} and using Young inequality to
deal with the term containing $\mathbf{f}$:
\begin{itemize}
\item $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$  is bounded in
 $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^4(\Omega))$ independently
of $n$.

\item $\nabla \mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently
of $n$.

\item $\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}$ is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently
of $n$.

\item $\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}$  is bounded in
 $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently
of $n$.

\item $\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}$  is bounded in
 $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently
of $n$.

\item $k(\lVert\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\rVert^2-1)$  is bounded in
 $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently
of $n$.
\end{itemize}
Thus, there exist $\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$, $\mathbf{h}_{\eta}$, $\mathbf{e}_{\eta}$,
such that up to a subsequence:
\begin{itemize}
\item $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ converges weakly to $\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ in
 $\mathbb{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ converges strongly to $\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ converges strongly to $\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ in
$\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ and  in
$\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p(\Omega))$ for all $1\leq
p<6$. See Lemma~\ref{lemma:AubinSimon}.

\item $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}$ converges weakly to $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item For all time $T$, $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(T,\cdot)$ converges weakly
to $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{\eta}(T,\cdot)$ in $\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$.

\item $\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}$ converges weakly to
$\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{\eta}}{\partial t}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}$ converges star weakly to $\mathbf{h}_{\eta}$
in $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.

\item $\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}$ converges star weakly to $\mathbf{e}_{\eta}$
in $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.

\end{itemize}
Since $\lVert\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\rVert^2-1$ converges to $0$,
$\lVert\mathbf{m}_\eta\rVert=1$ almost everywhere on $\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega$.

For the reasons explained in \S\ref{subsect:nLimit},
we integrate \eqref{eq:EnergyInequalityPenalized} over $\lbrack T_1,T_2\rbrack$,
drop the term
$k\lVert\lVert\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\rVert^2-1\rVert_{\mathrm{L}^2(\Omega)}^2/4$, and
compute the limit as $k$ tends to $+\infty$. After the limit is taken,
we drop the integral over $\lbrack T_1,T_2\rbrack$ and obtain that for
almost all $T>0$:
\begin{equation}\label{eq:EnergyInequalityLayer}
\begin{split}
&\frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}_{\eta}(T,\cdot)\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})\mathbf{m}_{\eta}(T,\mathbf{x}))
 \cdot\mathbf{m}_{\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&
+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{e}_{\eta}
 (T,\mathbf{x})\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{h}_{\eta}(T,\mathbf{x})
 \rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&
+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_\eta(T,\cdot))
+\frac{\alpha}{1+\alpha^2}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\lVert\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{\eta}}{\partial
    t}\rVert^2 \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\\
&+\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}
 \lVert\mathbf{e}_{\eta}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\frac{\sigma}{\mu_0}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \mathbb{R}^3}
 \mathbf{f}\cdot\mathbf{e}_{\eta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\leq
\frac{A}{2}\int_{\Omega}\lVert\nabla\mathbf{m}_0\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\Omega}(\mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x}) \mathbf{m}_0)\cdot\mathbf{m}_0\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\&\phantom{=}
+\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_0)
+\frac{\varepsilon_0}{2\mu_0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}
 \lVert\mathbf{e}_0\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\lVert\mathbf{h}_0\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\end{split}
\end{equation}

We replace $\boldsymbol{\phi}$
in \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationPenalizedMagnetization}
with $\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge \boldsymbol{\varphi}$ where $\boldsymbol{\varphi}$
is $\mathcal{C}^\infty_c(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega;\mathbb{R}^3)$:
\begin{align*}
& -\alpha\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\Big(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial  t}\Big)
\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\lVert\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\rVert^2\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&=\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\Big(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\cdot\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}\Big)
 (\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\phantom{=}
+(1+\alpha^2) A\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}\sum_{i=1}^3
	\Big(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge \frac{\partial \mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial x_i}
 \Big)\cdot\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\varphi}}{\partial x_i}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\phantom{=}
+(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\left(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(t,\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x}) \mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}(t,\mathbf{x})\right)
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(t,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\left(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}\right)
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\&\phantom{=}
        -(1+\alpha^2)\frac{K_s}{\eta}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
        (\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta})(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2) \frac{ J_1}{\eta}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge  \mathbf{m}^{*}_{k,\eta})\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t		
\\&\phantom{=}
	-2(1+\alpha^2)\frac{J_2}{\eta}
		\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}^{*})(\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}\wedge \mathbf{m}^{*}_{k,\eta})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t,
\end{align*}
We then take the limit as $k$ tends to $+\infty$:
\begin{subequations}
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationLayerMagnetization}
\begin{split}
& -\alpha\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
\Big(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\wedge \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{\eta}}{\partial  t}\Big)
\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t +\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{\eta}}{\partial t}\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&=
+(1+\alpha^2) A\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}\sum_{i=1}^3
	\Big(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\wedge \frac{\partial \mathbf{m}_{\eta}}{\partial x_i}\Big)
        \cdot\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\varphi}}{\partial x_i}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\phantom{=}
+(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\left(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}(t,\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x}) \mathbf{m}_{\eta}(t,\mathbf{x})\right)
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(t,\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2)\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega}
	\left(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\wedge \mathbf{h}_{\eta}\right)
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\&\phantom{=}
        -(1+\alpha^2)\frac{K_s}{\eta}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
        (\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{\eta})(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t					
\\&\phantom{=}
-(1+\alpha^2) \frac{ J_1}{\eta}\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\wedge  \mathbf{m}^{*}_{\eta})\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t		
\\&\phantom{=}
	-2(1+\alpha^2)\frac{J_2}{\eta}
		\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{\eta}^{*})(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\wedge \mathbf{m}^{*}_{\eta})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t,
\end{split}
\end{equation}

We take the limit in \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationPenalizedExcitation} as
$k$ tends to $+\infty$:
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationLayerExcitation}
\begin{split}
&-\mathrm{\mu}_0\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\left(\mathbf{h}_{\eta}+
\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\right)) \frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\psi}}{\partial t}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
+\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_{\eta}\operatorname{curl}\boldsymbol{\psi}
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\\
&=\mathrm{\mu}_0\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\left(\mathbf{h}_{0}+
\mathbf{m}_{0}\right))\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(0,\cdot)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\boldsymbol{\psi}$ in
$\mathrm{L}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega))$ such that
$\frac{\partial \boldsymbol{\psi}}{\partial t}$ belongs to
$\mathrm{L}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.

We  take the limit in \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationPenalizedElectric} as
$k$ tends to $+\infty$,
\begin{equation}\label{eq:WeakFormulationLayerElectric}
\begin{split}
&-\mathrm{\varepsilon}_0\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_{\eta}\cdot
\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\Theta}}{\partial t}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
-\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{h}_{\eta}\cdot \operatorname{curl}\boldsymbol{\Theta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&
+\sigma\iint_{\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega}(\mathbf{e}_\eta+\mathbf{f})\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&=
\mathrm{\varepsilon}_0\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_{0}\cdot\boldsymbol{\Theta}(0,\cdot)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x},
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\boldsymbol{\Theta}$ in in
$\mathrm{L}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega))$ such that
$\frac{\partial \boldsymbol{\Theta}}{\partial t}$ belongs to $\mathrm{L}^1(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.
\end{subequations}

\subsection{Limit as $\eta$ tends to $0$}\label{subsect:EtaLimit}

Since $\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$ is continuously imbedded in
$\mathcal{C}^0\big(\rbrack-{L^-},{L^+}\lbrack\setminus\{0\};\mathbb{L}^4({B})\big)$,
$\mathrm{E}_s^\eta(\mathbf{m}_0)$ remains bounded independently of
$\eta$ and converges to $\mathrm{E}_s(\mathbf{m}_0)$. Thus, using~\eqref{eq:EnergyInequalityLayer} and the
constraint $\lVert\mathbf{m}_\eta\rVert=1$ almost everywhere:
\begin{itemize}
\item $\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$  is bounded in
  $\mathbb{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega)$ by $1$.

\item $\nabla \mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ is bounded in
 $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently
of $\eta$.

\item $\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{k,\eta}}{\partial t}$ is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently
of $\eta$.

\item $\mathbf{h}_{k,\eta}$  is bounded in in $\mathrm{L}^\infty
(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently of $\eta$.

\item $\mathbf{e}_{k,\eta}$  is bounded in in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ independently
of $\eta$.
\end{itemize}
Thus, there exists $\mathbf{m}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega))$ and in
$\mathrm{H}^1_{\mathrm{loc}}(\lbrack0,+\infty\lbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$,
$\mathbf{h}$ in \\ $\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$
and $\mathbf{e}$ in $\mathbb{L}^\infty(\mathrm{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$
such that up to a subsequence
\begin{itemize}
\item $\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ converges weakly to $\mathbf{m}$ in
 $\mathbb{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ converges strongly to $\mathbf{m}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ converges strongly to $\mathbf{m}$ in
$\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$ and thus in
$\mathcal{C}(\lbrack0,T\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p(\Omega))$ for all $1\leq p<+\infty$.

\item $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{\eta}$ converges weakly to $\nabla\mathbf{m}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$.

\item For all time $T$, $\nabla\mathbf{m}_{\eta}(T,\cdot)$ converges weakly
to $\nabla\mathbf{m}(T,\cdot)$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$.

\item $ \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}_{\eta}}{\partial t}$ converges weakly to
  $\frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}$ in $\mathrm{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega)$.

\item $\mathbf{h}_{\eta}$ converges star weakly to $\mathbf{h}$ in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.

\item $\mathbf{e}_{\eta}$ converges star weakly to $\mathbf{e}$ in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.
\end{itemize}
As $\lVert\mathbf{m}^\eta\rVert=1$ almost everywhere,
$\lVert\mathbf{m}\rVert=1$ almost everywhere. Moreover, as
$\mathbf{m}_\eta(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{m}_0$, we have
$\mathbf{m}(0,\cdot)=\mathbf{m}_0$.


For the reasons explained in \S\ref{subsect:nLimit},
we integrate~\eqref{eq:EnergyInequalityLayer} over $\lbrack T_1,T_2\rbrack$, and
compute the limit as $\eta$ tends to $0$. All the volume terms
converge to their intuitive limit.
Taking the limit in the surfacic terms requires more work. The space
$\mathbb{H}^1(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times \Omega)$
is compactly imbedded into
\[
\mathcal{C}^0(\lbrack-{L^-},0\rbrack;
\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B}))\otimes\mathcal{C}^0
(\lbrack0,{L^+}\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B})).
\]
 This is a direct application of Lemma~\ref{lemma:compactCL2imbedding} with
$\mathcal{O}=\rbrack0,T\lbrack \times  B$ and, thus a
direct consequence of the extended Aubin's
lemma~\ref{lemma:AubinSimon}.
Therefore, $\mathbf{m}_\eta$ converges
strongly to $\mathbf{m}$ in
\[
\mathcal{C}^0(\lbrack-{L^-},0\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^2
(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B}))\otimes\mathcal{C}^0
(\lbrack0,{L^+}\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B})).
\]
Since $\lVert \mathbf{m}_\eta\rVert=1$, the convergence is strong in
\[
\mathcal{C}^0(\lbrack-{L^-},0\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p
(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B}))\otimes\mathcal{C}^0(\lbrack0,
{L^+}\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B})),
\]
for all $p<+\infty$.  Therefore,
\begin{align*}
&\limsup_{\eta\to0}\int_{T_1}^{T_2}\lVert\mathrm{E}^\eta_s(\mathbf{m}_\eta(t,\cdot))
-\mathrm{E}^\eta_s(\mathbf{m}(t,\cdot))\rVert\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\leq
\limsup_{\eta\to0}\frac{1}{2\eta}\int_{-\eta}^{\eta}\int_{T_1}^{T_2}
\iint_{{B}}\lVert   P(\mathbf{m}_\eta(t),\mathbf{m}_\eta^{*}(t))
-P(\mathbf{m}(t),\mathbf{m}^{*}(t))\rVert\,\mathrm{d} x\,\mathrm{d} y\,\mathrm{d} z \,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\leq
\limsup_{\eta\to0}\sup_{z\in\lbrack-\eta,\eta\rbrack}\int_{T_1}^{T_2}
\iint_{{B}}\lVert P(\mathbf{m}_\eta(t),\mathbf{m}_\eta^{*}(t))
-P(\mathbf{m}(t),\mathbf{m}^{*}(t))
\rVert\,\mathrm{d} x\,\mathrm{d} y\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\leq0,
\end{align*}
where $P$ is some polynomial. Moreover, $\mathbf{m}(\cdot,\cdot)$ belongs to:
\[
\mathcal{C}^0\big(\lbrack-{L^-},0\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p
(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B})\big)
\otimes \mathcal{C}^0\big(\lbrack0,{L^+}\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p
(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B})\big).
\]
Therefore,
\begin{align*}
&\limsup_{\eta\to0}\int_{T_1}^{T_2}\lVert\mathrm{E}^\eta_s(\mathbf{m}(t,\cdot))
-\mathrm{E}_s(\mathbf{m}(t,\cdot))\rVert\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\leq
\limsup_{\eta\to0}\frac{1}{2\eta}\int_{T_1}^{T_2}\int_{-\eta}^{\eta}
\iint_{{B}}\lVert P(\mathbf{m}(t),\mathbf{m}^{*}(t))\\
&\quad -P(\mathbf{m}(x,y,0^+,t),\mathbf{m}(x,y,0^-,t))
\rVert\,\mathrm{d} x\,\mathrm{d} y\,\mathrm{d} z\,\mathrm{d} t
\\&\leq \limsup_{\eta\to0}\sup_{z\in\lbrack-\eta,\eta\rbrack}
 \int_{T_1}^{T_2}\iint_{{B}}\lVert P(\mathbf{m}(t),\mathbf{m}^{*}(t)) \\
&\quad -P(\mathbf{m}(x,y,0^+,t),\mathbf{m}(x,y,0^-,t))
\rVert\,\mathrm{d} x\,\mathrm{d} y\,\mathrm{d} t
\leq 0.
\end{align*}
Hence, the integral over $\lbrack T_1,T_2\rbrack$ of
inequality \eqref{eq:EnergyInequality} holds for all $0<T_1<T_2$,
therefore inequality~\eqref{eq:EnergyInequality} is satisfied for
almost all $T>0$.

We take the limit in \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationLayerMagnetization} as $\eta$ tends
to $0$. All the volume terms converges to their intuitive limit.
Moreover, because of the strong  convergence, along a subsequence, of
$\mathbf{m}_\eta$ to $\mathbf{m}$ in
\[
\mathcal{C}^0(\lbrack-{L^-},0\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p
(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B}))\otimes\mathcal{C}^0(\lbrack0,
{L^+}\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B})),
\]
for all $p<+\infty$, we have
\begin{gather*}
\begin{aligned}
&\limsup_{\eta\to0}  \frac{1}{\eta}\Big\lvert
\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
        (\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{\eta})(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(t,\mathbf{x}) \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\ &
-\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
        (\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\mathbf{m})(\mathbf{m}\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(t,\mathbf{x})
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\Big\rvert =0,
\end{aligned}\\
\begin{aligned}
&\limsup_{\eta\to0}  \frac{1}{\eta}\Big\lvert
\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\wedge 
       \mathbf{m}^{*}_{\eta})\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(t,\mathbf{x}) \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t
\\ &
-\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}\wedge  \mathbf{m}^{*})\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(t,\mathbf{x})
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\Big\rvert
=0,
\end{aligned}\\					
\begin{aligned}
&\limsup_{\eta\to0}  \frac{1}{\eta}\Big\lvert
		\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}\cdot\mathbf{m}_{\eta}^{*})(\mathbf{m}_{\eta}
\wedge \mathbf{m}^{*}_{k,\eta})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(t,\mathbf{x}) \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t \\
&-		\iint_{\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times (B\times \rbrack-\eta,\eta\lbrack)}
	(\mathbf{m}\cdot\mathbf{m}^{*})(\mathbf{m}\wedge \mathbf{m}^{*})
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\varphi}(t,\mathbf{x})
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} t\Big\rvert=0.
\end{aligned}
\end{gather*}
Since
$\mathbf{m}$ belongs to
\[
\mathcal{C}^0(\lbrack-{L^-},0\rbrack;
\mathbb{L}^p(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B}))\otimes
\mathcal{C}^0(\lbrack0,{L^+}\rbrack;\mathbb{L}^p(\rbrack0,T\lbrack\times {B})),
\]
each surface term also converges to its surface intuitive
limit. Therefore, the weak
formulation~\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationMagnetization} is also satisfied.

We take the limits as $\eta$ tends to $0$ in
\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationLayerExcitation}
and~\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationLayerExcitation}. All the volume terms
converges to their intuitive limit.
Hence, relations~\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationExcitation}
and~\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationElectric} are satisfied.
This finishes our proof of
Theorem~\ref{theo:ExistenceWeakLandauLifshitzMaxwellSurfaceEnergies}.

\section{Characterization of the $\omega$-limit set}
\label{section-omegalimit}

We consider $(\mathbf{m},\mathbf{h},\mathbf{e})$ a weak solution to the
 Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system given by
Theorem~\ref{theo:ExistenceWeakLandauLifshitzMaxwellSurfaceEnergies}.

We consider $\mathbf{u}\in \omega(m)$. There exists a non decreasing sequence
$(t_n)_n$ such that $t_n\to +\infty$, and
$\mathbf{m} (t_n,\cdot)\rightharpoonup \mathbf{u}$ in $\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$ weak.
Since $\Omega $ is a smooth bounded domain, then $\mathbf{m} (t_n,\cdot)$
tends to $\mathbf{u}$ in $\mathbb{L}^p(\Omega)$ strongly for $p\in [1,6[$,
and extracting a subsequence, we assume that $\mathbf{m}(t_n,\cdot)$ tends
to $\mathbf{u}$ almost everywhere, so that the saturation constraint
$\lVert \mathbf{u} \rVert =1$ is satisfied almost everywhere.

In addition, we remark that for all $n$,
$\lVert \mathbf{m}(t_n,\cdot)\rVert=1$ almost everywhere, so that
$\lVert\mathbf{m}(t_n,\cdot)\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^\infty(\Omega)}=1$.
By interpolation inequalities in the $\mathrm{L}^p$ spaces, we obtain that
for all $p<+\infty$, $\mathbf{m}(t_n,\cdot)$ tends to $\mathbf{u}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^p(\Omega) $ strongly.
\smallskip


\textbf{First Step.} we fix $a$ a non negative real number.
for $s\in ]-a,a[$ and $x\in \Omega$, for $n$ large enough, we set
\[
\mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})=\mathbf{m}(t_n+s,\mathbf{x}).
\]
We have the following estimate:
\begin{align*}
\frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a
\int_\Omega \lVert \mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})-\mathbf{m} (t_n,\mathbf{x})
\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s
&=   \frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a \int_\Omega
\lVert \int_0^s \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}(t_n+\tau,\mathbf{x}) d\tau \rVert^2
\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s\\
&\leq  \frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a\lvert s\rvert\int_\Omega
\int_{t_n-a}^{+\infty}  \lVert \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}(\tau,\mathbf{x})\rVert
^2 d\tau \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s\\
&\leq   a\int_{t_n-a}^{+\infty} \int_\Omega
\lVert \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}(\tau,\mathbf{x})\rVert^2 d\tau \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} .
\end{align*}
Since $ \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}$ is in $\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega)$,
we obtain that
\[
\int_{-a}^a\int_\Omega
\lVert \mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})-\mathbf{m} (t_n,\mathbf{x})\rVert ^2\,\mathrm{d}
\mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s\to 0 \quad\text{ as $n$ tends to }+\infty.
\]
Since $\mathbf{m} (t_n,\cdot)$ tends strongly  to $\mathbf{u}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$, then
\begin{equation} \label{cacaprout}
\mathbf{U}_n\text{ tends strongly to } \mathbf{u} \text{ in }
\mathrm{L}^2(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack; \mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)).
\end{equation}

We remark now that the sequence $(\nabla \mathbf{U}_n)_n$ is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$. In addition,
$(\frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t})_n$ is bounded in
$\mathrm{L}^2(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$.
So, by applying Aubin's Lemma with $X=\mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$,
$B= \mathbb{H}^{\frac{3}{4}}(\Omega)$, $Y=\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)$,
 $r=2$ and $p=+\infty$, we obtain that $(\mathbf{U}_n)_n$ is compact in
$\mathcal{C}^0([-a,a];\mathbb{H}^{\frac{3}{4}}(\Omega))$, so that
\begin{equation}
\label{cacaproutbis}
\mathbf{U}_n\text{ tends strongly to } \mathbf{u} \text{ in }
\mathcal{C}^0([-a,a];\mathbb{H}^{\frac{3}{4}}(\Omega)).
\end{equation}

By continuity of the trace operator, since
$\mathbb{H}^{\frac{1}{4}}(\Gamma)\subset \mathbb{L}^2(\Gamma)$,
 we obtain that
\[
\gamma(\mathbf{U}_n)\to \gamma(\mathbf{u})\text{ strongly in }
\mathcal{C}^0([-a,a];\mathbb{L}^2(\Gamma)).\]

In addition, by classical properties of the trace operator, for all
$n$, we have $\lVert \mathbf{U}_n\rVert_{\mathrm{L}^\infty(\rbrack-a,a
\lbrack\times\Omega)}=1$, so
$\lVert\gamma(\mathbf{U}_n)\rVert_{\mathrm{L}^\infty([-a,a]\times\Gamma)}\leq 1$.
We obtain then in particular that
\[
\gamma (\mathbf{U}_n)\to \gamma (\mathbf{u})\text{ strongly in
  $\mathbb{L}^p(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack\times \partial \Omega), \;
  p<+\infty$.}
\]


\textbf{Second step.}
 We consider a smooth positive function $\rho_a$ compactly supported
in $[-a,a]$ such that
\begin{gather*}
\rho_a(\tau)=1\quad \text{for }\tau\in [-a+1,a-1],\\
0\leq \rho_a\leq 1,\quad
\lvert \rho_a'\rvert\leq 2.
\end{gather*}
For $n$ large enough, we set
\[
\mathbf{h}_a^n(\mathbf{x})=\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \mathbf{h}
  (t_n+s,\mathbf{x})\rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} s, \quad
\mathbf{e}_a^n(\mathbf{x})=\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \mathbf{e}
(t_n+s,\mathbf{x})\rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} s.
\]
By construction of $(\mathbf{m}, \mathbf{h} ,\mathbf{e})$, we know that
 $\mathbf{h}$ and $\mathbf{e}$ are in
$\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+; \mathbb{L} ^2(\mathbb{R}^3))$.
We have the estimate
\begin{align*}
 \lVert\mathbf{h}_a^n\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)}^2
& = \int_{\mathbb{R}^3}
\lVert \frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \mathbf{h} (t_n + s,\mathbf{x})\rho_a(s)
 \,\mathrm{d} s\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\
&\leq  \frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \rho_a^2(s)\,\mathrm{d} s \frac{1}{2a}
\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\int_{-a}^a \lVert \mathbf{h}
(t_n+s,\mathbf{x})\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} s \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x}
\\
&\leq   \frac{2a}{2a} \lVert\mathbf{h} \rVert_{\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;
\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3))}.
\end{align*}
Therefore,
\begin{equation} \label{estihna}
\forall a\geq 1, \; \forall n,\;  \lVert\mathbf{h}^n_a
\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)}\leq  \lVert\mathbf{h}
\rVert_{\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3))}.
\end{equation}
In the same way, we prove that
\begin{equation}\label{estiena}
\forall a\geq 1, \; \forall n,\;  \lVert\mathbf{e}^n_a
\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)}\leq  \lVert\mathbf{e}
\rVert_{\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3))}.
\end{equation}
So for a fixed value of $a$ we can assume by extracting a subsequence
that $\mathbf{h}^n_a$ and $\mathbf{e}^n_a$ converge weakly in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)$ when $n$ tends to $+\infty$:
\[
\mathbf{h}^n_a \rightharpoonup \mathbf{h}_a \text{ and }
 \mathbf{e}^n_a \rightharpoonup \mathbf{e}_a\text{  weakly  in }
\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)\text{ when }n\to +\infty.
\]

In the weak formulation~\eqref{eq:WeakFormulationMagnetization},
we take $\boldsymbol{\phi}(t,\mathbf{x})=\frac{1}{2a}\rho_a(t-t_n)
\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})$
where $\boldsymbol{\psi}\in {\mathcal D}(\overline{\Omega})$.
We obtain after the change of variables $s=t-t_n$:
\[
\frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a \int_\Omega \Big(
    \frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t}-\alpha \mathbf{U}_n \wedge  \frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t}\Big)
\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})   \rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s= T_1 + \ldots +T_6
\]
with
\begin{gather*}
T_1= (1+\alpha^2) A\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \int_\Omega \sum_{i=1}^3
	\Big(\mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})\wedge 
\frac{\partial \mathbf{U}_n}{\partial x_i}(t,\mathbf{x})\Big)
	\cdot\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\psi}}{\partial x_i}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s,
\\	
T_2=(1+\alpha^2)\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a\int_\Omega
	\left(\mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})
 \mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})\right)		
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})\rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s,
\\	
T_3= -(1+\alpha^2)\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a\int_\Omega
	\left(\mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{h}(t_n+s,\mathbf{x})\right)		
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})\rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s,
\\
T_4= -(1+\alpha^2)K_s\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a
\int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma \mathbf{U}_n)(\gamma \mathbf{U}_n\wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} s,
\\	
T_5= -(1+\alpha^2)J_1\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\gamma \mathbf{U}_n \wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{U}_n)\cdot
\gamma\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} s,	
\\	
T_6=-2(1+\alpha^2)J_2\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a
\int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\gamma \mathbf{U}_n\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{U}_n)
(\gamma \mathbf{U}_n\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{U}_n)
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\rho_a(s)
\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} s.
\end{gather*}
Now for a fixed value of the parameter $a$, we take the limit of the previous
equation when $n$ tends to $+\infty$.

\emph{Left hand side term:} we have the following estimates.
\begin{align*}
&\Big\lvert \frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a \int_\Omega
\Big( \frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t}-\alpha \mathbf{U}_n
  \wedge  \frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t}\Big)
\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x}) \rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s\Big\rvert
\\
&\leq (1+\alpha) \frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a \rho_a(s) \lVert\frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t}
(s,\cdot)\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}\lVert\boldsymbol{\psi}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}
\\
&\leq \frac{1}{\sqrt{2a}}\lVert\boldsymbol{\psi}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}(1+\alpha)
\Big(  \int_{-a}^a\int_\Omega \lVert\frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s
\Big)^{1/2}
\\
&\leq \frac{1}{\sqrt{2a} }\lVert\boldsymbol{\psi}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}(1+\alpha)
\Big(  \int_{t_n-a}^{+\infty}\int_\Omega \lVert
    \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}\rVert^2\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s\Big)^{1/2}
\end{align*}
Since $ \frac{\partial\mathbf{m}}{\partial t}\in \mathrm{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega))$,
 the last right hand side term tends to zero when $n$ (and so $t_n$) tends to
$+\infty$. Therefore
\[
\frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a \int_\Omega \Big(
    \frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t}-\alpha \mathbf{U}_n \wedge  \frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial t}\Big)
\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})
  \rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s\to 0 \text{ when }n\to +\infty.
\]

\emph{Limit for $T_1$:} since $\mathbf{U}_n\to \mathbf{u}$ strongly in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack\times \Omega)$, since
$ \frac{\partial\mathbf{U}_n}{\partial x_i}\rightharpoonup \frac{\partial\mathbf{u}}{\partial x_i}$
in $\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack\times \Omega)$ weak, we obtain that
\[
T_1\to (1+\alpha^2)A\frac{1}{2a}
  \int_{-a}^a \rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} s \int_{\Omega}
  \sum_{i=1}^3
	\Big(\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\wedge \frac{\partial \mathbf{u}}{\partial x_i}
(\mathbf{x})\Big)
	\cdot\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\psi}}{\partial x_i}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\]

\emph{Limit for $T_2$:} since
$\mathbf{U}_n$ tends to $\mathbf{u}$ strongly in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack\times \Omega)$,
\[T_2\to (1+\alpha^2)A\frac{1}{2a}
  \int_{-a}^a \rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} s \int_{\Omega}
\left(\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})
\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\right)		
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.\]

\emph{Limit for $T_3$:} we write
\begin{align*}
T_3&=-(1+\alpha^2)\int_\Omega (\mathbf{u} \wedge 
  \mathbf{h}^n_a)\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi} \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} \\
&\quad + (1+\alpha^2)\frac{1}{2a}
  \int_{-a}^a\int_\Omega ((\mathbf{u} - \mathbf{U}_n)
\wedge \mathbf{h}(t_n+s, \mathbf{x}))\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})\rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d}
\mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s.
\end{align*}
We estimate the right hand side term as follows:
\begin{align*}
&\Big\lvert \frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a\int_\Omega ((\mathbf{u}
- \mathbf{U}_n)\wedge \mathbf{h}(t_n+s, x))\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})\rho_a(s)
\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} \,\mathrm{d} s\Big\rvert
\\
&\leq \frac{1}{2a}\lVert\boldsymbol{\psi}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^\infty
(\Omega)}\lVert\mathbf{u}
-\mathbf{U}_n\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack\times \Omega)}
\lVert\mathbf{h}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack t_n-a,t_n+a\lbrack\times \Omega)}.
\end{align*}
So since $\mathbf{U}_n$ tends to $\mathbf{u}$ in
$\mathbb{L}^2(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack\times \Omega)$, we obtain that
\[
T_3\to -(1+\alpha^2)\int_\Omega (\mathbf{u} \wedge  \mathbf{h}_a)
\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi} \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x}.
\]

\emph{Limit for $T_4$, $T_5$ and $T_6$:}
since $\gamma(\mathbf{U}_n)\to \gamma(\mathbf{u})$ strongly in
$\mathbb{L}^p(\rbrack-a,a\lbrack\times \Gamma^\pm)$ for $p<+\infty$,
the same occurs for $\gamma^*(\mathbf{U}_n)$ so that we obtain:
\begin{gather*}
T_4\to -(1+\alpha^2)K_s \frac{1}{2a} \int_{-a}^a \rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d} s \int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma \mathbf{u})(\gamma \mathbf{u} \wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}}),
\\
T_5\to
-(1+\alpha^2)J_1\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a\rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d} s
\int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\gamma \mathbf{u} \wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{u})
\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}}),	
\\	
T_6\to 	-2(1+\alpha^2)J_2
		\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a\rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d} s
\int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\gamma \mathbf{u}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{u})(\gamma
\mathbf{u}\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{u})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}}).
\end{gather*}
So we obtain that $\mathbf{u}$ satisfies for all
 $\boldsymbol{\psi}\in {\mathcal D}'(\overline{\Omega})$:
\begin{align*}
& A \int_{\Omega}  \sum_{i=1}^3
	\Big(\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\wedge \frac{\partial \mathbf{u}}{\partial x_i}
(\mathbf{x})\Big)
	\cdot\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{\psi}}{\partial x_i}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+ A \int_{\Omega}
\left(\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\wedge \mathbf{K}(\mathbf{x})\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})\right)		
	\cdot\boldsymbol{\psi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
	\\
&-\frac{2a}{\int_{-a}^a \rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d} s}(1+\alpha^2)\int_\Omega \mathbf{u}
\wedge  \mathbf{h}_a\boldsymbol{\psi} \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x}
-K_s  \int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\boldsymbol{\nu}\cdot\gamma \mathbf{u})(\gamma \mathbf{u} \wedge \boldsymbol{\nu})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})
	\\
&-J_1\int_{(\Gamma^\pm)}
	(\gamma \mathbf{u} \wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{u})\cdot\gamma
\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\\
&-2J_2\int_{(\Gamma^\pm)} 	(\gamma \mathbf{u}\cdot\gamma^{*}\mathbf{u})
(\gamma \mathbf{u}\wedge \gamma^{*}\mathbf{u})
	\cdot\gamma\boldsymbol{\psi}(\hat{\mathbf{x}})\,\mathrm{d} S(\hat{\mathbf{x}})=0.
\end{align*}

We remark that by density, we can extend this equality for all
$\boldsymbol{\psi} \in  \mathbb{H}^1(\Omega)$.
We take now the limit when $a$ tends to $+\infty$. By definition
of $\rho_a$ we obtain that
\[
\frac{2a}{\int_{-a}^a \rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d} s}\to 1.
\]


Concerning $\mathbf{h}_a$, by taking the weak limit in Estimate~\eqref{estihna},
 we obtain that
\begin{equation} \label{estiha}
\forall a\geq 1, \quad
\lVert \mathbf{h}_a \rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R} ^3)}
\leq  \lVert \mathbf{h}  \rVert_{\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;
\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R} ^3))}.
\end{equation}
So by extracting a subsequence, we can assume that
\[
\mathbf{h}_a  \rightharpoonup \mathbf{H} \text{ in }
\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3) \text{ weak  when }a\to +\infty.
\]
In \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationExcitation}, we take
$\boldsymbol{\psi}(t,\mathbf{x})=\theta_a(t-t_n)\nabla \xi(\mathbf{x})$
where $\xi \in \mathcal{D}(\mathbb{R}^3)$ and where
\[
\theta_a(t)=\int_a^t \rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d} s.
\]
We obtain then that
\begin{align*}
&-\mu_0\int_{-a}^a\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}(\mathbf{h}(t_n+s,\mathbf{x})
+\overline{\mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})})\cdot
\nabla \xi (\mathbf{x}) \rho_a(s)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s
\\
&=\mu_0\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}(\mathbf{h}_0+\overline{\mathbf{m}_0})\cdot
\nabla \xi(\mathbf{x}) \theta_a(0) \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}=0
\end{align*}
since $\operatorname{div} (\mathbf{h}_0 + \overline{\mathbf{m}_0})=0$

So for all $\xi \in {\mathcal D}'(\mathbb{R}^3)$, for all $a\geq 1$
and all $n$ great enough,
\[
-\mu_0 \int_{\mathbb{R}^3}(\mathbf{h}_a^n(\mathbf{x})
+\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \overline{\mathbf{U}_n(s,\mathbf{x})}\rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} s)
\cdot \nabla \xi (\mathbf{x}) \,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x}=0.
\]
We take the limit of this equality when $n$ tends to $+\infty$ for a fixed $a$:
\[
-\mu_0 \int_{\mathbb{R}^3}(\mathbf{h}_a(\mathbf{x})
+\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \rho_a(s) \,\mathrm{d} s
\overline{\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})}) \cdot \nabla \xi (\mathbf{x})
\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x}=0,
\]
and taking the limit when $a$ tends to $+\infty$, we obtain
\[
-\mu_0 \int_{\mathbb{R}^3}(\mathbf{H}(\mathbf{x})
+ \overline{\mathbf{u}(\mathbf{x})}) \cdot \nabla \xi (\mathbf{x}) \,\mathrm{d}
 \mathbf{x}=0;
\]
that is,
\[
\operatorname{div} (\mathbf{H} + \overline{\mathbf{u}})=0\quad \text{in }
{\mathcal D}'(\mathbb{R}^3).
\]
In \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationElectric}, we take
$\boldsymbol{\Theta}(t,\mathbf{x})=\frac{1}{2a}\rho_a(t-t_n) \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})$,
where $\mathbf{\xi} \in \mathcal{D}(\mathbb{R}^3;\mathbb{R}^3)$. We obtain:
\begin{equation} \label{machin}
\begin{aligned}
&-\varepsilon_0\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \int_{\mathbb{R}^3}
 \mathbf{e}(t_n+s,\mathbf{x}) \cdot
\rho_a'(s) \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x}) \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s
-\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{h}_a^n\cdot\operatorname{curl}{\mathbf{\xi}}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
\\
&+\sigma\int_{\Omega}\mathbf{e}_a^n\cdot \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x}
   +\sigma \int_\Omega \frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \mathbf{f}(t_n+s, \mathbf{x})
\cdot\rho_a(s) \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s
\\
&=\varepsilon_0\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}_0\cdot \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})
\rho_a(-t_n)\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}.
\end{aligned}
\end{equation}

For $n$ large enough, the right hand side term vanishes. We denote by $\gamma_a^n$
 the term
\[
\gamma_a^n=-\varepsilon_0\frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a
\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{e}(t_n+s,\mathbf{x}) \cdot
\rho_a'(s) \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x}) \,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s.
\]
We have
\[
\lvert \gamma_a^n\rvert \leq \frac{2\varepsilon_0}{a}\lVert
\mathbf{\xi}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)} \lVert\mathbf{e}
\rVert_{\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3))}.
\]
So for a fixed $a$, we can extract a subsequence till denoted
$\gamma_a^n$ which converges to a limit $\gamma_a$ such that
\[
\lvert \gamma_a\rvert\leq \frac{2\varepsilon_0}{a}\lVert
\mathbf{\xi}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3)} \lVert\mathbf{e}
\rVert_{\mathrm{L}^\infty(\mathbb{R}^+;\mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^3))}.
\]
Moreover,
\begin{align*}
&\lVert \frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \int_\Omega \mathbf{f}(t_n+s, \mathbf{x})
  \rho_a(s) \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s\rVert \\
&\leq\frac{1}{2a}\Big(\int_{t_n-a}^{t_n+a} \lVert\mathbf{f}(s,\cdot) \rVert^2_{
    \mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}\,\mathrm{d} s\Big)^{1/2}\Big(\int_{-a}^a
  (\rho_a(s))^2\,\mathrm{d} s\Big)^{1/2}\lVert\mathbf{\xi}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}.
\end{align*}
So
\[
\lVert \frac{1}{2a}\int_{-a}^a \int_\Omega \mathbf{f}(t_n+s, \mathbf{x})
  \rho_a(s) \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}\,\mathrm{d} s\rVert
\leq
\frac{1}{\sqrt{2a}}\lVert\mathbf{\xi}\rVert_{\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}
\Big(\int_{t_n-a}^{+\infty} \lVert\mathbf{f}(s,\cdot)
\rVert^2_{\mathbb{L}^2(\Omega)}\,\mathrm{d} s\Big)^{1/2}
\]
thus for a fixed $a$, since $\mathbf{f}\in \mathbb{L}^2(\mathbb{R}^+\times \Omega)$,
 this term tends to zero as $n$ tends to $+\infty$.

Therefore, taking the limit when $n$ tends to $+\infty$ in \eqref{machin} we obtain
\[
\gamma_a -\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{h}_a\cdot\operatorname{curl}{\mathbf{\xi}}
\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}+\sigma \int_{\Omega}\mathbf{e}_a\cdot
\mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} =0.
\]
Taking now the limit when $a$ tends to $+\infty$ yields
\begin{equation} \label{bidule}
-\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{H}\cdot\operatorname{curl}{\mathbf{\xi}}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}
+\sigma \int_{\Omega}\mathbf{E}\cdot \mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})\,\mathrm{d} \mathbf{x} =0,
\end{equation}
where $\mathbf{E}$ is a weak limit of a subsequence of $(\mathbf{e}_a)_a$.

In the same way, in \eqref{eq:WeakFormulationExcitation},
we take $\boldsymbol{\psi} (t,\mathbf{x})=\rho_a(t-t_n)\mathbf{\xi}(\mathbf{x})$.
By the same arguments, we obtain that
\[
\int_{\mathbb{R}^3} \mathbf{E} \cdot\operatorname{curl}\mathbf{\xi}=0;
\]
that is, $\operatorname{curl} E=0$ in ${\mathcal D}'(\mathbb{R}^3)$.

So we remark the $\mathbf{E}$ is in $\mathbb{H}_{\rm curl}(\mathbb{R}^3)$
and by density of ${\mathcal D}(\mathbb{R}^3;\mathbb{R}^3)$
in this space, we can take $\xi = \mathbf{E}$ in \eqref{bidule}.
We obtain then that
\[
\sigma\int_\Omega \lVert \mathbf{E}\rVert ^2 =0.
\]
Therefore  from \eqref{bidule} we obtain that
for all $\mathbf{\xi} \in {\mathcal D}(\mathbb{R}^3;\mathbb{R}^3)$,
\[
\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\mathbf{H}\cdot\operatorname{curl}{\mathbf{\xi}}\,\mathrm{d}\mathbf{x}=0;
\]
that is, $\operatorname{curl} \mathbf{H} =0$ in ${\mathcal D}'(\mathbb{R}^3)$.
So $\mathbf{H}$ satisfies:
\[
\operatorname{div}(\mathbf{H} + \overline{\mathbf{u}})=0,\quad
\operatorname{curl} \mathbf{H} =0.
\]
This concludes the proof of Theorem~\ref{theo-omegalim}.


\subsection*{Conclusion}
In this article, we have proven the existence of solutions to the
Landau-Lifshitz-Maxwell system with nonlinear Neumann boundary
conditions arising from surface energies. We have also characterized
the $\omega$-limit set of those weak solutions.

Further improvements should be possible. On the one hand, we expect that
extending these results to curved spacers should be possible. No
fundamental new idea should be necessary to carry out such an
extension of our results as long as the spacer fully separates the
domain in two. However, even in that case, the technicalities
would lengthen the proof and the statement of the theorem as it would
be necessary to write down geometric conditions on the spacers (the
spacer cannot share a tangent plane with the domain boundary as it
would create cusps).

On the other hand, the construction of more regular solutions for this
 model remains open.

\subsection*{Acknowledgments}
This study has been carried out with financial support from the French
State, managed by the French National Research Agency (ANR) in the
frame of the ``Investments for the future'' Programme IdEx Bordeaux -
CPU (ANR-10-IDEX-03-02).


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\end{thebibliography}


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