1. Introduction
In this paper, we study the following Kirchhoff-type equation with
:
where
are constants, exponent
, parameter
, and
denotes a Lagrange multiplier. The above
in (
1) is called a variable nonlocal term, and
is an
-subcritical term.
In recent decades, many different types of elliptic equations involved in (
1) have been studied extensively through variational methods and functional analysis techniques. For instance, when
and
in (
1), Equation (
1) comes from the well-known Bose-Einstein condensates [
1,
2,
3], which can be described by a Gross–Pitaevskii (G-P) energy functional [
4,
5]. Especially for
in ring-shaped, multi-well, sinusoidal, and periodic forms, the authors in [
6,
7,
8,
9] presented the existence, non-existence, and limit properties of
-normalized solutions when
tends to a threshold value
. Furthermore, if
is a logarithmic or homogeneous function [
10,
11], the local uniqueness was also analyzed as
approaches
.
For
, Equation (
1) is regarded as a classic Kirchhoff-type equation. When
, Ye [
12,
13] gave a quantitative classification of existence and nonexistence for the
-normalized solution. Meng and Zeng [
14] have displayed a detailed limit behavior of the
-normalized solution when
is a periodic function. Somewhat similarly, there are many works [
15,
16,
17,
18] involved in the existence, non-existence, and limit properties of
-normalized solutions when (
1) possesses an
-subcritical term. If
is a polynomial potential, Tang, Zhou, and their co-workers in [
15,
19] obtained some results on the refined limit behavior of
-normalized solutions as
or as
.
Inspired by previous works, in the present paper, we shall study
-normalized solutions for the
-subcritical Kirchhoff-type Equation (
1) with a variable nonlocal term. A well-known result shows that the
-normalized solution of (
1) can be solved by dealing with the following constrained minimization problem
where
fulfills
The above
in (
2) satisfies
and
such as
with norm
.
Because many physicists are often interested in
-normalized solutions, we study minimization problem (1.2) with
. In terms of physics, if
, the constant
c denotes the number of particles, mass, density, etc. The readers are encouraged to refer to the papers [
12,
13,
20] for more details on physical aspects. Furthermore, we mention that, for
, the techniques to deal with these problems are essentially the same. Without loss of generality, we only consider
.
For convenience, the structure of our paper is arranged as follows. The main three theorems of this paper are introduced in
Section 2. In
Section 3, we shall give a detailed analysis of the limit properties of least energy
and minimizer
as
when
. In
Section 4, for any
and positive sequence
with
as
, we are devoted not only to establishing a refined energy estimation of
, but also analyzing the concrete limit behavior of constraint minimizer
.
2. Main Results
To obtain the detailed limit behavior of the
-normalized solution, some results on the existence and non-existence of constraint minimizers for (
2) are necessary. For this reason, the potential
is restricted to satisfying
Next, we introduce a nonlinear scalar field equation [
21],
where (
5) admits a unique (up to translation) positive radially symmetric solution
. At the same time, one can obtain from (
5) that
In view of [
22] (Proposition 4.1), the
satisfies
Furthermore, the following Gagliardo–Nirenberg (G-N) inequality [
23] is necessary
where
is given by (
5).
Based on the assumption
, we recall from [
20,
24,
25] that the following existence and non-existence results of the constraint minimizer for
hold.
Theorem 1. Assume that holds and in (
1)
; then, there exists a critical value such that has at least one minimizer if , and has no minimizer for . Furthermore, for any and , has at least one minimizer. Notice that
is a constrained minimization problem related to the classic G-P functional, and the conclusion of Theorem 1 comes from [
20] (Theorem 1). Also for
,
is associated with a Kirchhoff-type equation, and the related results can be obtained from [
24] (Theorem 1.2) or [
25] (Theorem 1). We, however, state the results of Theorem 1 here for the reader’s convenience, and the detailed proof process of Theorem 1 can be found in [
20,
24,
25].
The above Theorem 1 gives the fact that
has no minimizer for
, but for any
and
,
has at least one minimizer. An interesting question is what happens on the constraint minimizer of
when
s tends to 0 from the right. In truth, a priori analysis shows that the constant
is a critical threshold, which is the criterion used to judge the constraint minimizer of
blowing up or converging as
. According to Theorem 1, we set
be a constraint minimizer of
for any
; then we always say that
is also a nonnegative minimizer of
by the fact that
.
Next, we firstly establish some results on the limit properties of the least energy and nonnegative minimizer as when .
Theorem 2. Assume that holds and that for any , , let be a nonnegative minimizer of . Then, we haveFurthermore, for any , it admits a such that as where is a nonnegative minimizer of . Theorem 1 shows that for any
and
,
has at least one minimizer. However, for
and
,
has no minimizer. We next are concerned with the limit property of the minimizer as
when
. For this goal, a more appropriate assumption about the potential
is given as follows:
Further, we denote the class of minima for
by
Theorem 3. Suppose that and hold. For any and positive sequence with as , set to be the nonnegative minimizer of , and then exists as a unique local maximum point such that has a subsequence (still denoted by ) satisfying, as ,andwhere Q is given by (
5)
and . Moreover, the and satisfy andwhere the function means . 4. Limit Behavior Analysis of
In this section, we are concerned with the limit property of minimizer as
when
. Before this, we define a constrained minimization problem without potential such as
where
and
S satisfy
In order to attain our goal, the following existence result of constrained minimizer for (
32) is established for any
when
. Note from [
24] (Theorem 1.1) that for
, a similar result can also be found.
Lemma 1. For any and , has at least one nonnegative minimizer.
Proof. We firstly claim that for any
and
,
In truth, we choose a test function such as
It is derived from (
6), (
34) that
and
Hence, it follows from (
9) and (
35) that
For
and
, choosing
and putting it into (
36), we have
Therefore, (
33) holds.
By applying (
8), one obtains
which yields that for any fixed
,
is bounded from below on
. According to (
33) and (
38), and choosing
as a minimizing sequence of
, it then follows from (
33) and (
38) that
is bounded in
. Recall from [
27] (Appendix A.III) and [
24] (Lemma 2.3), we see that there exists a nonnegative and non-increasing sequence
such that
is also a minimizing sequence of
. At the same time,
is bounded in
. Applying [
28] (Proposition 1.7.1), there exists a subsequence of
(still denoted by
) and a function
satisfying
In the following, we prove that
. Firstly, one can derive from (
39) that
. If not, we have, as
,
which, together with (
32) and (
33), yields that
However, this is a contradiction, and hence,
. Using the fact, we obtain from (
33) and (
39) that
Denote
; then the above results show that
. Setting
, we obtain from (
32) and (
41) that
this yields from (
33) that
, that is,
. Since
, one has
, which, together with (
41) and (
42), implies that
is a minimizer of
. By the definition of
, we see that
is a minimizer, too. Therefore, we always say that
has at least one nonnegative minimizer. □
Lemma 2. For any fixed , set as a nonnegative minimizer of ; then, satisfies, as ,where means . As , the minimizer behaves likewhere Q satisfies Equation (
5)
. Proof. Choosing the same test function as (
34), similar to the estimations (
35) and (
36), we have
For any fixed
, we choose
as
. Taking
into (
45), it then yields that as
We next give the lower energy estimation of
when
as
. In view of Lemma 1, we assume that
is a nonnegative minimizer of
. Applying the G-N inequality (
8) and (
9), it is deduced that
Defining a function
and
, a simple calculation shows that
attains its unique minimum at
It then follows from (
47) that as
Moreover, the procedures of (
46) and (
49) yield that
attains its minimum at
as
, where
. □
To obtain more detailed information about the minimizer and
as
, we always assume that
is a nonnegative minimizer of
. It then follows that
satisfies the elliptic equation
where
denotes a Lagrange multiplier. Furthermore, we set
Lemma 3. For , the , and potential energy satisfy andMoreover, as , Proof. If
, then
is bounded in
. Applying (
16), there admits a
and
exists as a subsequence (still denoted by
) satisfying, as
,
Similar to (
27) and (
31), it is deduced that
which yields that
is a minimizer of
. But this is impossible because Theorem 1 shows that
has no minimizer for
. Hence, we have
as
.
On the one hand, by the definitions of
and
, one directly derives that
On the other hand, we turn to estimate an upper bound of
as
. Toward this goal, we choose a cut-off function
such as
, and
for
,
for
,
for
. Define
where
satisfies
and
is given by (
44). The above
is chosen so that
. Applying (
7), one can calculate from (
58) that
Based on this fact, we then have
and
where
as
. Equations (
60)–(
62) together with (
57) yield that
which then completes the proof of (
52). Furthermore, we obtain from the definitions of
and
that
and hence (
53) holds. Furthermore, the estimation of (
54) is deduced directly from Lemma 2 and (
52) and (
53). □
Lemma 4. For and any positive sequence with as , the nonnegative minimizer has at least one local maximum point . Define an -normalized functionas given by (
51)
; then, there exists a finite ball and a constant such thatFurthermore, admits a convergent subsequence (still denoted by ) such thatwhere satisfies , that is, where is a global minimum point of . Proof. Since
is a nonnegative minimizer of
, it satisfies (
50). Using the results of Lemma 2 and (
52), we have, as
,
which then yields from (
54) that, as
,
Define an
-normalized function
One then obtains from (
53) and (
65) that, as
,
which derives from (
54) that
Because
satisfies (
50), by the definition of
, it follows that
fulfills
which, together with (
54), (
65) and (
67), yields that as
,
Based on
,
and (
68), one can use the method of [
29] (Lemma 3.5) to acquire that
has at least one local maximum point by applying the standard regularity theory and comparison principle to elliptic Equation (
50). Set
as the local maximum point and define the
-normalized function
such as (
63); then, it follows from (
50), (
54) and (
67) that
and
satisfies
where
. Thus, for
small enough, we have
where
. Applying the De Giorgi–Nash–Moser theory [
30] (Theorem 4.1), one obtains that
where
is a constant dependent on the upper bound of
.
In fact, we see that 0 is a local maximum point of
due to
, which is a local maximum point of
. We next argue that there exists a constant
satisfying
If (
72) is not true, then for any
, one obtain
which, together with the vanishing lemma [
31] (Lemma 1.1), yields that
as
. However, this is a contradiction with (
69). Hence, (
72) holds, and then (
64) follows from (
71) and (
72).
Next, we need to prove that
is bounded uniformly as
. If this is false, then there exists a subsequence
(still denoted by
) with
as
such that
; one then obtains from (
63) and (
64) that
where
is an arbitrarily large constant. However, this contradicts (
53). Hence,
is a bounded sequence in
.
Passing to a subsequence if necessary, there is a
such that
. In truth, we can prove that
. If not, one denotes
; then, (
64), together with Fatou’s Lemma, gives
which is a contradiction with (
53). We thereby complete the proof of Lemma 4. □
In the final part, we shall give the proof of Theorem 3.
Proof of Theorem 3. Let
be a nonnegative minimizer of
and
be is its local maximum point. Define a function the same as (
63), then, for any positive sequence
with
as
. Using the definitions of (
51) and (
63), it follows that
It then shows that
is a bounded sequence in
. Passing to a subsequence if necessary (still denoted by
), there exists a
satisfying, as
,
Since
satisfies the elliptic equation (
70), passing to the weak limit, it is deduced from (
9), (
54), (
68) and (
76) that
satisfies (in the weak sense)
In fact, since (
72) holds, we always say that
applyies the strong maximum principle to (
77). Moreover, because (
5) has a unique (up to translation) positive radially symmetric solution
, it is restricted to the fact that there exists a
such that
fulfills
which, together with (
6), gives
The above results show that
strongly in
as
. By applying the Hölder and Sobolev inequalities, one further derives that
for any
with
. This indicates that
strongly in
as
. One then obtains from (
75)–(
77) that
that is,
Under the assumption of
, using the technique of proving Theorem 1.2 in [
7], one infers from (
70) that
,
. Hence, we have
and
Since the origin is a unique critical point (up to translation) of
, one then concludes from (
78) that the origin is the unique critical point of
. Therefore, one obtains
At last, set
as the local maximum point of
; then, the (
72) shows that
. Taking
small enough, one infers from [
32] (Lemma 4.2) that the origin is the unique local maximum point of
as
. It then yields that
is the unique maximum point of
. The proof of Theorem 3 is thereby completed. □