Multiple positive solutions for a class of (2, p)-Laplacian equation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4644624
DOI10.1063/1.5050030zbMath1412.35080OpenAlexW2904324826MaRDI QIDQ4644624
Ting Rong, Zhanping Liang, Fuyi Li
Publication date: 8 January 2019
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5050030
Boundary value problems for second-order elliptic equations (35J25) Laplace operator, Helmholtz equation (reduced wave equation), Poisson equation (35J05) Positive solutions to PDEs (35B09) Quasilinear elliptic equations with (p)-Laplacian (35J92)
Related Items
Multiple solutions for Robin \((p,q)\)-equations plus an indefinite potential and a reaction concave near the origin, Constant sign and nodal solutions for parametric anisotropic (p, 2) -equations
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Some properties and applications related to the \((2,p)\)-Laplacian operator
- Dirichlet (\(p,q\))-equations at resonance
- Existence and multiplicity of solutions for resonant \((p,2)\)-equations
- Noncoercive resonant \((p,2)\)-equations
- Constant-sign and nodal solutions of coercive \((p, q)\)-Laplacian problems
- Solitons in several space dimensions: Derrick's problem and infinitely many solutions
- On the stationary solutions of generalized reaction diffusion equations with \(p\)\& \(q\)-Laplacian
- On an asymptotically linear elliptic Dirichlet problem
- Minimax theorems
- The beginning of the FuÄik spectrum for the \(p\)-Laplacian
- Positive solutions of a kind of equations related to the Laplacian and \(p\)-Laplacian
- Dual variational methods in critical point theory and applications
- Asymmetric \((p,2)\)-equations, superlinear at \(+\infty\) resonant at \(-\infty\)
- Asymmetric \(8(p,2)\)-equations with double resonance
- Multiple Solutions to (p,q)-Laplacian Problems with Resonant Concave Nonlinearity
- Nodal solutions for (đ,2)-equations
- Wangâs multiplicity result for superlinear $(p,q)$âequations without the AmbrosettiâRabinowitz condition