1. Introduction
The present work is devoted to studying the asymptotic behavior of a solution to the Dirichlet problem for an elliptic equation with a small parameter at higher derivatives:
where
,
, and
f are some given functions. Our main motivation for considering such problem comes from stochastic processes
defined by means of Itô stochastic differential equations ([
1], Section 4.1):
where
,
is an
n-dimensional Wiener process defined on a probability space
. Here
is the sample space,
is a
-algebra,
is a probability measure. The symbol
stands for a small parameter characterizing the intensity of the perturbation
. We assume that the origin is an asymptotically stable equilibrium for unperturbed Equation (
2) as
. A solution to problem (
2) is a random process
,
,
, whose trajectories leave each neighbourhood
of the equilibrium almost surely, see ([
2], Ch. 4). At that, one of the key characteristics of this process is the first time, when a trajectory
hits the boundary of the neighbourhood
. This first time is defined as
In terms of this time we introduce the function
This function characterizes the distribution of the points
on the boundary
, at which the trajectories hit the boundary for the first time. According ([
1], Sectiion 4.4.2), the function
solves boundary value problem (
1).
Asymptotic behaviour of the solutions to such and similar problems was studied before in a series of works. In [
3], the Dirichlet problem for the equation
was considered in a two-dimensional domain under the assumption
or
. An asymptotic expansion for the solution was constructed and a proposed way for finding its terms was rather complicated. In [
4], the Dirichlet problem was considered for a multi-dimensional equation
In a non-rigorous way, basing on heuristic considerations, a formula for the leading term in the asymptotics for the solution was found. No justification was made and no estimates for the error term were established. A rigorous result was obtained in [
5]. Namely, it was shown that, as
, the solution converges to a certain explicitly found constant uniformly on compact subsets of the domain
. In [
6], this result was improved in the following sense: it was proved that a solution
of problem (
1) converges to
exponentially fast uniformly on compact subsets of the domain
. Various aspects of the convergence of the solutions to constants were also discussed in papers [
7,
8,
9,
10]. In [
11,
12], more general evolutionary problems were considered and asymptotic results were obtained by analysing the behavior of the solutions for a large time. In [
13], a result of such type was obtained for a quasilinear equation.
It should be also mentioned that a close problem for an inhomogeneous equation with a homogeneous boundary condition
was actively studied in the case, when a potential
V has several stationary points in
. The solution to this problem is the mean exit time for the above-discussed process
in the case
, that is,
Such model describes an overdamped Langevin dynamics. Several stationary points of the potential
V correspond to a metastability phenomenon, when the Brownian particle can be attracted by several local minima of the potential and can leave their neighbourhoods in a finite time. In [
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19], there were constructed leading terms in the asymptotics for
as well as for other quantities characterizing this Brownian motion. In our recent work [
20], the case of the potential
V with a single minimum in the domain
was considered. In this case, a complete asymptotic expansion for the solution to problem (
3) was constructed. An explicit solution in the model case
as the domain
is a circle was found in [
21] and a complete asymptotic expansion was found on the base of this explicit representation. The problem on constructing a complete asymptotic expansion for the solution of (
1) and (
3) for general vector fields
F and potentials
V and for general domains
still remains open.
In the present work, we consider problem (
1) in an arbitrary multi-dimensional domain with an infinitely differentiable boundary. We assume that
and the potential
V is some sufficiently smooth function with the only minimum at origin and having no other stationary points in
. The minimum of
V at the origin can be degenerate; that is, the function
V is not assumed to be a Morse one. However, we assume that some differential of
V of a higher order is non-zero. Under these assumptions, we construct a complete asymptotic expansion for the solution to the considered problem. The structure of this expansion is as follows:
where
is the eigenfunction associated with the lowest eigenvalue of the considered problem and
is some constant. The boundary layer is constructed in the usual way and is employed to satisfy the boundary condition. It solves problem (
1) with
up to an arbitrary small error. However, this boundary layer does not provide a correct asymptotics for the solution since an error term turns out to exceed the boundary layer by the order. And only after extracting the term
the error term becomes small. This is a specific feature of the considered problem since very often a formal asymptotic solution provides a true asymptotics. In our case, the boundary layer serves as such formal asymptotic solution, but nevertheless, true asymptotics (
5) involve an extra term
.
Our technique follows the ideas developed in our recent work [
20]. While problem (
3) is rather specific since the right-hand side in the equation is just 1, this is not the case for problem (
1) with
in the sense that the right-hand side in the boundary condition is an arbitrary function. The approach used in [
20] for constructing a complete asymptotic expansion employed essentially that the right-hand side in the equation was the constant 1 and not an arbitrary function. At the same time, as we show in the present work, after appropriate modifications, the ideas of [
20] can be successfully transferred to problem (
1) with
and with an arbitrary right-hand side in the boundary condition.
In conclusion, we outline the structure of the paper. In the next section, we describe the problem and formulate the main result.
Section 3 contains several auxiliary lemmata, which are employed in the proof of the main result given in
Section 4. In
Section 5 we give some short concluding remarks.
2. Problem and Main Results
Let be Cartesian coordinates in the Euclidean space , , and be a bounded domain. We assume that this domain contains the origin and its boundary is infinitely differentiable. On the boundary we introduce some local coordinates related with some atlas , where are some infinitely differentiable functions. The symbol denotes the unit inward normal to and is the distance to a point measured along the normal . It is clear that there exists a fixed such that for we have and serve as local coordinates.
By
we denote a real function defined on
and satisfying the following assumptions:
where
,
are some numbers,
is an open ball of radius
centered at the origin,
,
are some positive constant independent of
x. Since the function
V is smooth in the vicinity of the origin, the inequality
holds as
and
, we see that this function has the global minimum at the origin and therefore,
and
.
Our work is devoted to studying the following singularly perturbed problem
with a given infinitely differentiable function
f defined on
. Here
is a small positive parameter. Our main aim is to construct a complete asymptotic expansion for the solution of this problem as
; we shall show that this problem is uniquely solvable.
In order to formulate our main result, we shall make use of some auxiliary notations. By
we denote the metric tensor on
and the second fundamental form on the inward side of
. We define the following functions on
:
Let
be a differentiable cut-off function vanishing as
and equalling to one as
. On the domain
, we introduce one more cut-off function:
Given a subdomain
, we let
and
In the space
we consider a closed differential operator
on the domain
, which is a subspace of the Sobolev space
consisting of the functions with the zero trace on
. This operator satisfies the identity
where
is the operator of multiplication by
, that is,
, and
is the self-adjoint operator in
with the differential expression
on the domain
. The spectra of the operators
and
coincide and consist of countably many discrete eigenvalues, which we take in the ascending order counting their multiplicities [
22]. The lowest eigenvalue
is simple and positive ([
20], Lm. 4.1). By
we denote an associated eigenfunction of the operator
. The following theorem was proved in ([
20], Thm. 2.1).
Theorem 1. Let assumptions (6) hold. The eigenfunction of the operator associated with the lowest eigenvalue belongs to and is non-zero at . Under the normalizationit satisfies the asymptotic formulafor all and all nonnegative integer N. The symbols denote some polynomials in ζ of degree at most with infinitely differentiable in s coefficients such that , . In particular, As , the error term obeys the estimatesfor each subdomain and In what follows, the eigenfunction is supposed to be chosen according the above theorem. Now we are in position to formulate our main result.
Theorem 2. Let assumptions (6) hold. Problem (7) is uniquely solvable. The solution has the following complete asymptotic expansion: Here are some polynomials in ζ of degree at most with infinitely differentiable in s coefficients and the initial conditions , , , are satisfied. In particular, The symbol denotes a constant given by the formula The constant has the following asymptotic expansion:where are some polynomials with constant coefficients, and The error term in (15) obeys the estimatesfor each subdomain and Let us discuss the main result. It provides a complete asymptotic expansion for the solution of problem (
7) as
goes to zero. This expansion consists of two main components and first we consider the second component. This is a boundary layer, which is the sum in the right-hand side in (
15). It is non-zero only in a small neighbourhood of the boundary
and decays exponentially fast as
increases. The main aim this layer serves for is to satisfy the inhomogeneous boundary condition in (
7). It is constructed in a standard way by substituting this expansion into boundary value problem (
7) and equating the coefficients at the like powers of
, see
Section 4.1. However, as we see in (
15), this boundary layer does not provide a true asymptotic expansion for the solution to problem (
7) since also the first term
is to be taken into consideration. This is a specific feature in comparison with the usual approach to constructing asymptotic expansions for solutions of singularly perturbed problems. Namely, given a singularly perturbed problem, not necessary with a small parameter at a higher derivative, one can try to guess how an asymptotic ansatz for the solution should look like. Then the assumed ansatz is substituted into the problem and this determines somehow the terms in the ansatz. The next step is to truncate the constructed formal asymptotic series and to see whether the truncated series solves the problem up to a small error. If this is the case, very often it turns out that a constructed formal asymptotic expansion provides a true asymptotic for the solution of the considered perturbed problem, but in view of the first term
in (
15), this is not the case for the considered problem.
The matter is as follows. The constructed boundary layer does solve problem (
7) up to an arbitrary small error and this problem is uniquely solvable. The latter unique solvability means that there exists an inverse operator
. However, the lowest eigenvalue
of this operator is positive and exponentially small, see Lemma 1, and hence, the norm of the inverse operator
is exponentially large. This is why, trying to estimate an error term for the boundary layer, we face exponentially large
estimates, while the boundary layer is power in
. A way to resolve this difficulty is to a select an exponentially growing part of the inverse operator
and to consider it independently. This part is a projector on the eigenfunction
(with the weight
). In terms of the solution
, this means that we need to find a projection of
on
and deduct it from
. Once we do this, a remaining part of the solution becomes orthogonal to
and the inverse operator
on the orthogonal complement to
is bounded uniformly in
. This allows us to get nice estimates for the error term. In other words, the boundary layer discussed above provides an asymptotic expansion for an orthogonal to
part of the solution.
The aforementioned projection of the solution
on
is represented in (
15) by the term
. The constant
is not exact but provides an approximation for the true one up to an exponentially small error. Although the term
is given in a closed and rather implicit form, it is possible to find its complete asymptotic expansion. The expansion for
is given by (
18). This asymptotics arises by substituting (
11) into formula (
17) and considering then the quotient of two obtained asymptotic series
Having this formula in mind, it is easy to find all polynomials
in (
18). By applying the Laplace method, it is possible to find complete asymptotic expansions for all
and
:
where
,
are some constants and
is some fixed number. And if
is a first non-zero coefficient in the above asymptotics for
, then
for all
j and all
. This means that asymptotics (
18) can be rewritten in terms of the fractional powers
.
The asymptotic expansion for
is provided in Theorem 1 in (
11). This asymptotics is a sum of the constant 1 and a boundary layer of a similar structure as that in (
15). The error terms in asymptotics (
11) are estimated in the same norms as the error terms in (
15). We shall discuss these estimates in the next paragraph. And now we just should say that by multiplying the above-discussed expansions for
and
we can find find a complete asymptotic expansion for the first term in (
15).
Theorem 2 provides a series of various estimates for the error term in asymptotics (
15), and similar estimates are given for the error terms in asymptotics (
11). Estimates (
21) and (
13) are given for the the uniform and integral norms over entire domain
, while estimates (22) and (14) are given in the same norm but with an exponential weight. This weight comes from identity (
9) and the definition of the operator
. Estimates (
20) and (14) show how small the error term is in the subdomains of
. Due to conditions (
6), the only minimum of the function
V is located at zero and the function
V attains its maximum on the boundary
. Hence, if a subdomain
is separated from the boundary
by a positive distance, according to estimates (
20) and (
12), the error term is exponentially small in
. If we also substitute asymptotics (
11) into (
15), we see that on such subdomain the solution
is exponentially close to the constant
. Then asymptotics (
18) becomes in fact that for
in the subdomain
. This result is consistent with ones of works [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10] stating that the solution converges to a constant uniformly on compact subsets of
.
5. Concluding Remarks
We first stress one more feature of asymptotics (
15). Let
be some non-empty subset of
and
f be supported in
. Then the probabilistic interpretation given in the Introduction means that in this case, the solution
describes how many trajectories of the Brownian particle hit the boundary for the first time somewhere in
and how these trajectories are distributed along
. In view of the construction of the boundary layer in
Section 4.1, in the considered case, the functions
vanish on
. The first term
in (
15) depends on
f only via the integral in (
17). This means that exactly the boundary layer in (
15) describes a gentle nature of the number and distribution of the trajectories of the Brownian particle hitting
, while the first term
serves only as a leading term and a rather rough approximation.
From the point of view of the singular perturbation theory, the results of this work and of [
20] show that problems (
3) and (
7) are nice specific examples of the asymptotic problem with the above-discussed property: the formal asymptotic expansions constructed for these problems do not provide true asymptotics for their solutions. The terms
are to be taken into consideration and the constants
is to be chosen so that it minimizes the smallness order for the error terms. These ideas first developed in [
20] for problem (
3) with a specific right-hand side in the equation turn out to be rather general and we adapted them to problem (
7) with an arbitrary right-hand side in the boundary condition.
In comparison with previous works, in this work and in [
20], we succeeded to construct the complete asymptotic expansions for the considered problems, however, assuming that the potential
V has the only minimum at the origin and no other stationary points in
. The issue on constructing similar complete asymptotics in the case of several stationary points of
V in
is still open and only leading terms of the asymptotics for the solutions are known [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19]. This is a more complicated case and our technique can not be applied directly to this case. Nevertheless, we strongly believe that at least partially, our ideas can be used also in this more complicated case.