Existence of blow-up solutions for a class of elliptic systems. (Q364243)
From MaRDI portal
This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes.
Please use this page instead for the normal view: Existence of blow-up solutions for a class of elliptic systems.
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6206675
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| default for all languages | No label defined |
||
| English | Existence of blow-up solutions for a class of elliptic systems. |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6206675 |
Statements
Existence of blow-up solutions for a class of elliptic systems. (English)
0 references
9 September 2013
0 references
elliptic system
0 references
supersolution
0 references
subsolution
0 references
variational method
0 references
blow-up
0 references
positive solution
0 references
The authors study existence of solutions to the problem NEWLINE\[NEWLINE \begin{aligned} \Delta u = F_u(x,u,v) \;\;\text{in}\;\;\Omega , \\ \Delta v = F_v(x,u,v) \;\;\text{in}\;\;\Omega , \tag{P}\\ u,v> 0 \;\;\text{in}\;\;\Omega . \end{aligned} NEWLINE\]NEWLINE Here \(\Omega \) is a smoothly bounded domain in \(\mathbb R^N \) or \(\Omega = \mathbb R^N\) and \(F\: \Omega \times \mathbb R^{+} \times \mathbb R^{+} \to \mathbb R^{+} \) is continuously differentiable. In case of a bounded domain, three types of boundary value problems are considered:NEWLINENEWLINE(F) the finite case: for \(\alpha , \beta \in (0, \infty)\) it holds \(u = \alpha\), \(v = \beta \) on \(\partial \Omega \),NEWLINENEWLINE(I) the infinite case: \(u(x) \to +\infty\), \(v(x) \to +\infty \) as dist\((x,\partial \Omega) \to 0\),NEWLINENEWLINEthe semifinite cases:NEWLINENEWLINE(SF1) \(u(x) \to +\infty \) as \(\mathrm{dist}(x,\partial \Omega) \to 0\), \(v(x) = \beta \) on \(\partial \Omega \),NEWLINENEWLINE(SF2) \(u(x) = \alpha \) on \(\partial \Omega \), \(v(x) \to +\infty \) as \(\mathrm{dist}(x,\partial \Omega) \to 0\).NEWLINENEWLINETo formulate the main theorem for the case of a bounded domain, the authors define a class \(\mathcal {F}\) as follows:NEWLINENEWLINEA function \(h\: [0, \infty) \to [0, \infty)\) belongs to \(\mathcal {F}\) if \(h \in C^1([0, \infty))\), \(h(0)= 0\), \(h'(t)\geq 0\) in \([0, \infty)\), \(h(t)> 0\) on \((0, \infty) \) and NEWLINE\[NEWLINE \int_1^{\infty }\frac {1}{H(t)^{1/2}}dt < +\infty , NEWLINE\]NEWLINE where \(H(t)= \int_0^th(s) ds\). The authors prove the following:NEWLINENEWLINETheorem 1.1: Assume that \(\Omega \) is bounded and that there exist functions \(f_1, f_2, g \in \mathcal {F}\) satisfying NEWLINE\[NEWLINE \begin{aligned} & F_t(x,t,s) \geq f_1(t)\;\;\forall x \in \overline {\Omega },\quad t,s > 0 \\ & F_s(x,t,s) \geq f_2(s)\;\;\forall x \in \overline {\Omega },\quad t,s > 0 \tag{C1}\\ & g(t) \geq \max \{F_t(x,t,t),F_s(x,t,t) \}\;\;\forall x \in \overline {\Omega },\quad t > 0. \end{aligned} NEWLINE\]NEWLINE Then system (P) with one of the boundary conditions (F), (I), (SF1) or (SF2) admits a positive solution.NEWLINENEWLINEThe second part of the paper is devoted to the system NEWLINE\[NEWLINE \begin{aligned} \Delta u = p(x) F_u(x,u,v) & \text{ in } \mathbb R^N, \\ \Delta v = q(x) F_v(x,u,v) &\text{ in } \mathbb R^N, \tag{LS}\\ u,v> 0 & \text{ in } \mathbb R^N. \end{aligned} NEWLINE\]NEWLINE The functions \(p\), \(q\) are supposed to satisfy the conditions NEWLINE\[NEWLINE \begin{aligned} & p,q > 0 \text{ on } \mathbb R^N, \quad p,q \in C^{0,\nu }_{\mathrm{loc}}(\mathbb R^N),\\ & \int_0^{\infty }r\Phi_p(r) dr < \infty , \text{ where }\Phi_p(r)= \max \{p(x); | x| = r\}, \tag{C2}\\ & \int_0^{\infty }r\Phi_q(r) dr < \infty , \text{ where } \Phi_q(r)= \max \{q(x); | x| = r\}. \end{aligned} NEWLINE\]NEWLINE The obtained result in this case reads:NEWLINENEWLINETheorem 1.2: Assume that \(\Omega = \mathbb R^N \) and conditions (C1), (C2) are satisfied. Then the system (LS) admits an entire large solution, i.e., a solution \((u,v)\) satisfying \(u(x) \to \infty\), \(v(x) \to \infty \) as \(| x| \to \infty \).NEWLINENEWLINEIn the proofs both variational methods and method of sub and supersolutions are combined.
0 references
0.871127188205719
0 references
0.8413410782814026
0 references
0.8349759578704834
0 references
0.8343486189842224
0 references