1. Introduction
Let
be a bounded domain with
-boundary
. In this paper, we study the following nonlinear eigenvalue problem for the Dirichlet
-Laplacian
For every
by
we denote the
r-Laplacian differential operator defined by
(
stands for the gradient of
u). When
, we have the usual Laplacian denoted by
.
In the reaction,
is a parameter and
is a Carathéodory function. Such a function is jointly measurable. We assume that for almost all
,
is
-sublinear as
. We are looking for positive solutions as the parameter
varies. Our work complements those by Gasiński and Papageorgiou [
1] and Papageorgiou, Rădulescu and Repovš [
2] where the reaction is
-superlinear in
. Moreover, in the aforementioned works, the equation is driven by the
p-Laplacian differential operator which is homogeneous, a property used by the authors in the proof of their results. In contrast, here, the
-Laplace differential operator is not homogeneous.
We mention that equations driven by the sum of two differential operators of different structures (such as
-equations) arise in the mathematical models of many physical processes. We refer to the survey papers of Marano and Mosconi [
3], Rădulescu [
4] and the references therein.
2. Mathematical Background—Hypotheses
The main spaces in the analysis of problem
are the Sobolev space
and the Banach space
By
, we denote the norm of the Sobolev space
. On account of the Poincaré inequality, we have
The Banach space
is an ordered Banach space with positive (order) cone
This cone has a nonempty interior given by
with
n being the outward unit normal on
and
.
We know that if
, then
(
). Let
by the operator defined by
The next proposition gathers the main properties of this operator (see Gasiński and Papageorgiou [
5]).
Proposition 1. The operator is bounded (that is, maps bounded sets to bounded sets), continuous, strictly monotone (thus maximal monotone too) and of type , that is, has the following property:
if weakly in and , then in .
If , then we write .
The Dirichlet
r-Laplace differential operator has a principal eigenvalue denoted by
. Therefore, if we consider the nonlinear eigenvalue problem
then this problem has a smallest eigenvalue
which is isolated and simple. It has the following variational characterization:
For
, we define
. Then, for
, we set
for all
. We know that
A set is said to be “downward directed”, if given , we can find such that , .
If
are measurable functions, then we write
if and only if for all compact sets
, we have
Evidently if and for all , then .
Now, we introduce the hypotheses on the reaction .
H: is a Carathéodory function such that for a.a. , , for all and
- (i)
For every
, there exists
such that
- (ii)
uniformly for a.a. ;
- (iii)
uniformly for a.a. ;
- (iv)
for every , there exists s such that for a.a. , the function is nondecreasing on .
Remark 1. Since we look for positive solutions and the above hypotheses concern the positive semiaxis , without any loss of generality we may assume that Hypothesis implies that is -sublinear as while hypothesis says that is sublinear near . Hypothesis is essentially a one-sided local Lipschitz condition.
3. Positive Solutions
We introduce the following two sets:
We also set
First, we establish the existence of admissible parameters (eigenvalues) and determine the regularity properties of the corresponding solutions (eigenfunctions).
Proposition 2. If hypotheses H hold, then and for all .
Proof. For every
, let
be the
-functional defined by
with
. From hypotheses
, we see that given
, we can find
such that
For
, using (
3) we have
with
being the Lebesgue measure on
. Using (
1) with
, we obtain
Choosing
, we infer that
for some
and thus
is coercive.
Additionally, using the Sobolev imbedding theorem, we see that
is sequentially weakly lower semicontinuous. So, by the Weierstrass–Tonelli theorem, we can find
such that
On account of the strict positivity of
, if
, then
Then, we have
with
. From (
5) and by choosing
big, we have
so
(see (
4)) and thus
In (
6), we choose
. We obtain
thus
and
.
Then, from (
6), we have
for
big and so
.
From Theorem 7.1 of Ladyzhenskaya and Ural’tseva [
6], we have that
. Then, the nonlinear regularity theory of Lieberman [
7] implies that
. Let
and let
be as postulated by hypothesis
. From (
7), we have
so
and thus
(see Pucci and Serrin [
8] (pp. 111, 120)). Therefore, we conclude that
for all
. □
Next, we show that is connected (more precisely, an upper half-line).
Proposition 3. If hypotheses H hold, and , then .
Proof. Since
, we can find
(see Proposition 2). We introduce the Carathéodory function
defined by
We set
and consider the
-functional
defined by
Note that (
8) and hypotheses
imply that, given
, we can find
such that
Using (
9) and choosing
small, as in the proof of Proposition 2, we show that
is coercive. In addition, it is sequentially weakly lower semicontinuous. Therefore, we can find
such that
so
and thus
In (
10), we choose
. Then, using (
8), we have
since
and
. Thus,
(see Proposition 1).
From (
8), (
10) and (
11), we infer that
so
and thus
. □
A byproduct of the above proof is the following corollary.
Corollary 1. If hypotheses H hold, and and , then and we can find such that .
We can improve this corollary using the strong comparison principle of Gasiński and Papageorgiou [
1] (Proposition 3.2).
Proposition 4. If hypotheses H hold, and and , then and we can find such that .
Proof. From Corollary 1, we already know that
and there exists
such that
Consider the function
defined by
Evidently,
(recall that
) and we have
so
Then, the tangency principle of Pucci and Serrin [
8] (Theorem 2.5.2, p. 35) implies that
(see (
12)). Let
and let
be as postulated by hypothesis
. We pick
and using (
12), hypothesis
and the facts that
and
, we have
Note that on account of (
13), we have
Then, (
14), (
15) and Proposition 3.2 of Gasiński and Papageorgiou [
1] imply that
. □
Proposition 5. If hypotheses H hold, then .
Proof. We argue by contradiction. Suppose that
. Let
be such that
and consider
for all
. We have
On account of hypotheses
, given
, we can find
such that
In (
16), first, we choose
and then on the right hand side we use (
17). We obtain
for some
, so
(see (
1) with
). Choosing
, we see that the sequence
is bounded. We may assume that
In (
16), we choose
, pass to the limit as
and use (
18). We obtain
so, using the monotonicity of
A, we obtain
thus
and hence
(see Proposition 1). Hypotheses
imply that given
, we can find
such that
so
thus the sequence
is bounded (see (
19) and recall that
). Therefore, if in (
16) we pass to the limit as
, we obtain
Choosing
, we obtain
so
From (
19) and the nonlinear regularity theory of Lieberman [
7], we know that there exist
and
such that
Since the embedding
is compact, from (
19), (
21) and (
22), we infer that
Let
, for
, with
denoting the norm of
. We have
On account of (
20), we have
for some
and thus
(recall that, if
, then
). Therefore, if in (
25) we pass to the limit as
and use (
23), (
24) and (
26), we obtain
so
and hence
and
(see (
25)), a contradiction since
for all
. Therefore, we conclude that
. □
Next, we prove a multiplicity result when .
Proposition 6. If hypotheses H hold and , then problem has at least two positive solutions Proof. Let
. We have
and then, according to Proposition 4, we can find
and
such that
We truncate
from below at
and introduce the Carathéodory function
defined by
We set
and consider the
-functional
defined by
Then, from (
28), we see that
with
. From the proof of Proposition 2, we know that
is coercive. Hence
is coercive. Additionally,
is sequentially weakly lower semicontinuous. Therefore, we can find
such that
so
and hence
Choose
. Using (
28), we have
(since
,
and
), so
(see Proposition 1).
Then, from (
28) and (
31), we infer that
.
If
, then this is the second positive solution of
. Therefore, we assume that
From (
27), (
29) and (
30), it follows that
and so
(see Gasiński and Papageorgiou [
9]).
Hypothesis
implies that given
, we can find
such that
(see (
2)). Let
with
. We have
(see (
1) with
). Choosing
, we obtain
so
and thus
(see Gasiński and Papageorgiou [
9]).
We assume that
. The reasoning is similar if the opposite inequality holds, using (
34) instead of (
32).
We also assume that
(the critical set of
) is finite. Otherwise, we already have an infinity of distinct positive solutions of
. On account of (
32) and using Theorem 5.7.6 of Papageorgiou, Rădulescu and Repovš [
2] (p. 449), we can find
small such that
Recall that
is coercive (see the proof of Proposition 2). Therefore, from Proposition 5.1.15 of Papageorgiou, Rădulescu and Repovš [
2] (p. 449), we have that
Then, (
35) and (
36) permit the use of the mountain pass theorem. Therefore, we can find
such that
From (
35) and (
37), we conclude that
□
It remains to be decided what we can say for the critical parameter value . We show that is admissible too.
Proposition 7. If hypotheses H hold, then .
Proof. Let
be such that
. We can find
such that
In (
38), we use
. Then,
On account of hypotheses
, given
, we can find
such that
We use (
40) in (
39) and have
(see (
1) with
and recall that
is the Lebesgue measure on
), so
We choose
and infer that the sequence
is bounded. Therefore, we may assume that
Then, reasoning as in the proof of Proposition 5 (see the part of the proof after (
18)), we show that
Therefore, if in (
38) we pass to the limit as
, then
so
and so
. □
Next, we show that for every , problem admits a smallest positive solution (minimal positive solution).
Proposition 8. If hypotheses H hold and , then problem admits a smallest solution (that is, for all ).
Proof. From Proposition 7 of Papageorgiou, Rădulescu and Repovš [
10], we know that
is downward directed. Using Lemma 3.10 of Hu and Papageorgiou [
11] (p. 178), we can find a decreasing sequence
such that
In (
41), we choose
and then use (
42) and hypothesis
to establish that
is bounded. Therefore, we may assume that
Then, as before (see the proof of Proposition 5 after (
18)), using (
43) we obtain
If in (
41) we pass to the limit as
and use (
44), then
so
,
. □
The theorem that follows summarizes our findings concerning the changes in the set of positive solutions of as moves.
Theorem 1. If hypotheses H hold, then there exists such that
- (a)
for all problem has at least two positive solutions , ;
- (b)
for , problem has at least one positive solution ;
- (c)
for every problem has no positive solution;
- (d)
for every , problem has a smallest positive solution .
Remark 2. From Proposition 4, we know that the minimal solution map
defined by
is strictly increasing in the sense that
It is worth mentioning that when the reaction
is
-superlinear, then we have the “bifurcation” in
, for small values of the parameter (see [
1,
2]). Here,
is
-sublinear, and the “bifurcation” in
occurs for large values of the parameter.
4. -Equations
In this section, we briefly mention the situation for the more general
-equations,
. We now deal with the following nonlinear Dirichlet eigenvalue problem:
If we strengthen the conditions on , we can have a similar “bifurcation-type” result for problem .
The new conditions on are the following:
H’: is a Carathéodory function, for a.a. , hypotheses are the same as the corresponding hypotheses and for a.a. , is strictly increasing on .
Remark 3. According to hypothesis
, we have
The function for a.a. , all with and satisfies hypotheses H’.
For the
-equation (
), we cannot use the tangency principle of Pucci and Serrin [
8] (p. 35) (see the proof of Proposition 4). Instead, on account of the stronger condition
, we can use Proposition 3.4 of Gasiński and Papageorgiou [
1] (strong comparison principle) and have that
. Then, all the other results remain valid and so we can have the following bifurcation-type result for problem
.
Theorem 2. If hypotheses hold, then there exists such that
- (a)
for all , problem has at least two positive solutions , ;
- (b)
for , problem has at least one positive solution ;
- (c)
for every , problem has no positive solution;
- (d)
for every , problem has a smallest positive solution .
Remark 4. The function defined bywith , satisfies hypotheses H but not hypotheses .
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, L.G. and N.S.P.; formal analysis, Y.B. and L.G.; investigation, Y.B., L.G. and N.S.P.; methodology, L.G. and N.S.P.; resources, L.G. and N.S.P.; supervision, N.S.P.; validation, Y.B., L.G. and N.S.P.; visualization, L.G. and N.S.P.; writing—original draft preparation, L.G. and N.S.P.; writing—review and editing, Y.B. and L.G. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
This research received no external funding.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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