Our main aim is to give an example of a nonlinearity $f$ such
that the
maximal existence interval of a solution of (1)-(3) is not
right
open. More precisely, the
solution
is defined and smooth on
$[-1,1] \times [0,t_{\max}]$, for some $t_{\max}>0$, but
it cannot
be
continuously extended (as a solution)
to $[-1,1] \times
[0,t_{\max}+\epsilon]$ for any $\epsilon >0$.
This
means that
nonexistence does not occur by
blow-up
of any kind, and no
continuation theorem is valid for (1)-(3),
in general.