Calculus of variations on time scales: Weak local piecewise \(C_{\text{rd}}^{1}\) solutions with variable endpoints. (Q1419769): Difference between revisions
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English | Calculus of variations on time scales: Weak local piecewise \(C_{\text{rd}}^{1}\) solutions with variable endpoints. |
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Calculus of variations on time scales: Weak local piecewise \(C_{\text{rd}}^{1}\) solutions with variable endpoints. (English)
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26 January 2004
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As the authors state in the Introduction, ``the purpose of this paper is to establish fundamental results in the calculus of variations on time scales with variable endpoints''. In the framework of a so-called ``time scales dynamics'' [e.g., \textit{M. Bohner} (ed.) and \textit{A. Peterson} (ed.), ``Advances in dynamic equations on time scales'' (2003; Zbl 1025.34001)], the main problem in calculus of variations consists in the minimization of the functional \[ {\mathcal F}(y(.)):=K(y(a),y(b))+\int_a^bL(t,y^\sigma(t),y^\Delta(t))\Delta(t) \] subject to the endpoint conditions \[ \varphi(y(a),y(b))=0 \] where \( T=[a,b]\subseteq \mathbb R\) is a closed subset (``time scale''), \(y^\Delta(.)\) denotes a certain ``times scales derivative'', \(y^\sigma(.)\) denotes the composition of \(y(.)\) with a certain ``jump operator'' \(\sigma(.)\), and ``the time scales integal'' \(\int_a^bf(t)\Delta(t)\) is defined as the ''Cauchy integral'' associated to the concept of \(\Delta\)-differentiation. Extending in this rather abstract context the main concepts and results in classical calculus of variations, the authors obtain necessary optimality conditions for a weak local minimum in the form of suitable variants of the Euler-Lagrange equation, transversality conditions and positivity of the second variation as well as a certain second order sufficient optimality condition; these results are shown to contain as particular cases the well-known classical results in the ``continuous case'', \(T=\mathbb R\), as well as in the ``discrete case'', \(T=\mathbb Z\).
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calculus of variations
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time scales dynamics
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weak local minimum
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necessary optimality conditions
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first variation
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Euler-Lagrange equation
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transversality condition
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second variation
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sufficient optimality condition
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