1. Introduction
In this paper, the author studied parabolic problems with nonlocal nonlinearity of the following type:
where
,
is a bounded domain with appropriately smooth boundary
, and
satisfies
is a given function which satisfies
with
.
is a degenerate parabolic operator, which satisfies
Here,
. The problem (1) can be decomposed into two symmetric cases: if
for any
then
. On the contrary, if
for any
,
In applications, Problem (1) arises in the model of American option pricing in the Black–Scholes models. The author refers to [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5] for the financial background of parabolic inequalities. Among them, the most interesting research topic is to construct different types of variational parabolic inequalities and analyze the existence and numerical method for their solutions (see, for example, refs. [
3,
4] and the references therein).
In the recent years, the study of variational and hemivariational inequalities has been considered extensively in the variety of numerical analysis (for details, see [
6,
7]) and mathematical theory analysis (see, for example, refs. [
8,
9,
10,
11] and the references therein). In 2014, the authors in [
8] discussed the problem
with the second order elliptic operator
They proved the existence and uniqueness of a solution to this problem with some restrictions on
,
F, and
L. Later, the authors in [
9,
10] extended the relative conclusions with the assumption that
is a constant,
, and
. The authors also discussed the existence and numerical algorithm of the proposed solution.
To the best of our knowledge, the existence and uniqueness of this problem with nonlocal nonlinearities are rarely studied. We cannot easily put the method in [
10,
12] for the case that
is the common second order elliptic operator.
The aim of this paper is to study the existence and uniqueness of solutions for a degenerate parabolic variational inequality problem with nonlocal nonlinearities. The innovation of this paper is to study the variational inequality based on parabolic operator
L with nonlocal nonlinearity
. Following a similar way in [
8], the existence and uniqueness of the solutions in the weak sense are proved by solving a series of penalty problems.
The outline of this paper is as follows: in
Section 2, we give the definition of the weak solution to problem and show the existence and uniqueness. In
Section 3, we give some estimates of the penalty problem (approximating problem).
Section 4 proves the existence and uniqueness of the solution given in
Section 2.
2. The Main Results of Weak Solutions
In this section, we first recall some useful definitions and known results, which can be found in [
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18]. Denote
and its norm is defined by
In the case of
,
.
is the space of all measurable functions, which, together with their first order derivatives, belongs to
that is
with norm
Let
.
be defined as the space of all measurable functions
u on
and for almost all
,
and
. The space
is defined in an obvious way.
If , the space and can be denoted by and respectively.
In the spirit of [
2,
3], we introduce the following maximal monotone graph
where
and depends only on
.
The purpose of the paper is to obtain the existence and uniqueness of weak solutions of (1). Let , and the weak solution is defined as follows.
Definition 1. A pair is called a weak solution of problem (1), if
(a) , (b) , (c) , (d) ,
(e) for every test-function and every , the following identity holds: It is worth noting that, if
, then
,
if
and
, then
, so
Hence,
plays the same role with
in (1). Our main result is the following theorem.
Theorem 1. Let . Under assumption (2), variational inequality problem (1) admits a unique weak solution in the sense of Definition 1.
We will prove Theorem 1 in
Section 4 by means of a parabolic penalty method and end this section by showing the following preliminary result that will be used several times henceforth.
Lemma 1 ([
13]).
Assume and let , then , 3. Penalty Problems
Since the problem is degenerate, let us consider the auxiliary penalty problem following the similar method of [
1,
2,
3],
where
with
K being a finite parameter to be chosen later. From
, it can be easy to see that
Here,
is the penalty function satisfying
It is noteworthy that, if
for any
,
, and, if
for any
, one obtains
so that
plays a similar role in (5). If
,
and, if
, we have
With a similar method as in [
8], we can prove that a regularized problem has a unique weak solution
satisfying the following integral identities
with
and
.
We start with the following preliminary result that will be used several times henceforth.
Lemma 2 (Comparison principle). Assume u and v are in . If in and on , then in .
Proof. Argue by contradiction and suppose
and
satisfies
in
, and there is a
such that for some
,
on the set
and
. Multiplying
by
w and integrating in
, then
where
By virtue of the first inequality of Lemma 2, one gets
Dropping the nonnegative terms
in (10) obtains
Noting that
on
, one gets
This leads to
, and a contradiction is obtained. □
Lemma 3. Let there be weak solutions of (5). Then,where . Proof. First, prove
by contradiction. Assume
in
,
. Noting
on
, we assume that
on
. With (5) and letting
, it is easy to see that
From Lemma 2, it holds that
Therefore, we obtain a contradiction.
Second, pay attention to
Applying the definition of
yields
From (18), applying Lemma 2 obtains
and
in
. Thus, combining (18) and (19) and using Lemma 2, one obtains
Third, aim to prove (14). From (5), it yields
It follows by
and the definition of
that
Thus, combining initial and boundary conditions in (5), (14) can be proved by Lemma 1. □
Lemma 4. Let be a weak solution of Problem (5). If and , for any , thenwhere C does not depend on ε. Proof. Multiplying the first equation of Problem (5) by
and integrating in
, for any
,
Applying the Hölder inequality, we have
Substituting (26) and (27) into (28) and dropping the non-negative term
,
Simplifying the factor
and integrating in
t, (24) follows. □
Lemma 5. If , , and , thenwhere C does not depend on ε. Proof. Multiplying the first equation of (5) by
and integrating in
,
First, estimate
and use Holder and Young inequalities to arrive at
Second, focus on
. It follows by the definition of
that
Using Holder and Young inequalities [
12], then
Third, pay attention to
. Applying (6) gives
Since
, it is easy to see that
Combining (29), (30), (32), and (34), then
and the result follows. □
4. Proof of Theorem 1
From Lemmas 3–5, we see that
is bounded and increasing in
, which implies the existence of a function
u and subsequences such that
Since
is continuous, we have that
Next, we pay attention to the limitation of .
Lemma 6. For any , let be the solution of (5). Then, Proof. Using (14) and the definition of
, one has
Now, consider
. According to the definition of
, we only need to prove that, if
,
In fact, if
, there exist a constant
and a
-neighborhood
such that, if
is small enough,
Thus, if
is small enough, such that
Furthermore, it follows by
that
Hence, (41) holds, and the proof of Lemma 6 completes. □
On the one hand, when , , and when , we have in (1). On the other hand, when , , and, when , we have in (5). When converges to , plays the same role in weak solution.
Now, we prove the existence of the weak solutions in the sense of Definition 1.
Proof of Existence of Theorem 1. Combining (36)–(40) and Lemma 6, passing to the limit in
we arrive at
Applying (36), (46), and Lemma 6, it is clear that
thus (a), (b), and (c) hold. Hence,
u is a weak solution of Problem (3) in the sense of Definition 1. □
Proof of Uniqueness of Theorem 1. Finally, we study the uniqueness of the weak solutions to Problem (1). Argue by contradiction and suppose and are two nonnegative weak solutions of Problem (1).
Define
,
and let
be a test-function in (42),
Now, analyze
. On one hand, if
, then using (13) yields
From (3) and (45), it is easy to see
Combining (45) and (46) and the fact that
,
On the other hand, if
, it is easy to have that
. In this case, (47) still holds.
Using (45) in (44) and dropping the nonnegative term, (44) becomes
By the above inequality and combining initial and boundary condition in Problem (1), the uniqueness of solution can be proved following the similar proof of Lemma 2. □
5. Numerical Examples
In order to observe the application of parabolic variational inequalities (3), we consider an American call option. An American option is the extension of a European option. An American option is a contract in which the investor has the right to purchase a certain amount of risky assets at a predetermined price
K during the duration
. Let
S be the risk asset price, then American barrier option
C at time
t can be written as
where
,
Here
is the volatility of risk assets,
q is the return rate of risk assets, and
r is the yield of risk-free assets.
Compared with American options, European options can only be exercised on the expiration date
T. The American barrier option
c at time
t can be written as
Calculate the price of European options and American options written on the stock price
at time 0. Define space step
h and time step
and denote
for
, and
, for
. Similar to the discussion in [
1,
2,
3], the value of American call options satisfies the explicit difference scheme:
where
,
The value of European call options satisfies the explicit difference scheme
Next, we numerically simulate the difference scheme (50) and (51) to compare the difference between the variational inequality (48) and the corresponding parabolic Equation (49). The parameters’ values are chosen as
. The results are shown in
Figure 1,
Figure 2 and
Figure 3. We found that the value of European and American options is increasing with the increase of stock price. Compared with
Figure 1,
Figure 2 and
Figure 3, it can be found that American options and European options have the same value when dividends are not paid (
q = 0). It is unwise to implement American options in advance in this case. When the rate of return
, the American option value obtained by variational inequality (49) is greater than the corresponding European option value. This shows that the early exercise clause of American options brings additional value compared with European Options.
6. Discussion
In this paper, we study the existence and uniqueness of solutions of variational inequality (1) by penalty function . Since the penalty function is controlled by , we integrate it into the degenerate parabolic operator and form a new parabolic operator . More importantly, the weak solution of the penalty problem under this operator exists. After giving some estimates of the penalty problem, the existence of weak solutions is given by the convergence method. The uniqueness of the weak solution is proved by the method of proof and Lemma 2.
Compared with other literature, Ref. [
8] analyzes the existence and uniqueness of solutions to variational inequality problems by using quasi-linear parabolic operators. The advantage of [
8] is that a nonlinear term related to
u is constructed in the Quasilinear Parabolic operator. In this connection, this paper constructs a nonlinear term related to
of
using
norm. Ref. [
10] is similar to [
8], and studies variational inequalities formed by linear parabolic operators with a nonlinear term related to
u.
Refs. [
12,
13,
14,
15,
16] study the existence, uniqueness, solvability, and stability of solutions of parabolic equations. Since these literature works are not concerned with variational inequalities, it is not necessary to give the comparison principle of parabolic operator and construct penalty functions when analyzing the existence.
7. Conclusions
This paper studies a class of variational inequalities with degenerate parabolic operators
with a degenerate parabolic operator, which satisfies
The existence and uniqueness of the solutions in the weak sense are proved by using the penalty method and the reduction method. However, there are some problems that have not been solved: when
, we cannot use Lemmas 2 and 3 to prove Lemmas 4–6. We will continue to study this problem in the future.