[Pardon my lack of rigor; I am an engineer by training. Also, for convenience, allow me to make this question as concrete as possible.]
Assume the simplest linear diffusion equation: $\alpha \dfrac{\partial^2u}{\partial x^2} = \dfrac{\partial u}{\partial t}$, where $u$ is the temperature and $\alpha$ is the thermal diffusivity.
The domain is finite, say, $[-100, 100]$. (If the assumption of an infinite domain makes it possible (or more convenient) to answer this question, then please assume so. However, the question of interest primarily pertains to a finite domain.)
Assume that the initial temperature profile has a compact support, say over $[-1, 1]$.
After the passage of an arbitrarily small but finite duration of time:
(i) would the temperature profile necessarily have support everywhere over the entire domain?
(ii) or, is it possible that a solution may still have some compact support over some finite interval that is smaller than the whole domain?
Can it be proved either way? Given the sum totality of today's mathematics (i.e. all its known principles put together), is it possible to pick between the above two alternatives in general?
A subsidiary question only if the alternative (ii) is possible: please supply an example, better so, it is of a kind wherein the initial profile is infinitely differentiable, e.g. the bump function $e^\frac1{x^2-1}$.
Thanks in advance.
--Ajit [E&OE]