An interior estimate for convex solutions and a rigidity theorem (Q5965168): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 12:41, 9 December 2024

scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6548316
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An interior estimate for convex solutions and a rigidity theorem
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6548316

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    An interior estimate for convex solutions and a rigidity theorem (English)
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    2 March 2016
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    Given a fully nonlinear PDE on all of Euclidean space, one can sometimes find very trivial solutions (like a linear one for instance). It is of interest to ask ``If a solution decays rapidly or is bounded or has a certain property, then is it necessarily the trivial solution?'' Theorems along these lines are called Bernstein-type results. One proves such results usually by proving interior estimates on the solution (typically \(C^2\) or \(C^1\) estimates). In this paper the Dirichlet problem for the \(k\)-Hessian equations is studied (with the forcing term allowed to depend on the gradient). Pogorelov-type interior estimates are proven (Theorem 1). Prior results are improved when additional (i.e., \(k+1\) convex) convexity assumptions are imposed (Theorem 2). Finally, a Bernstein-type result is proven (Theorem 4). The proofs rely on the maximum principle applied to a suitable, Gaussian-like function depending on the gradient of \(u\).
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    \(k\)-Hessian equations
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    interior \(C^2\) estimate
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    \(k+1\) convex
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    rigidity theorem
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