Generalized double integral inequalities and their applications in studying the stability of nonlinear integro-differential systems with time delay (Q372896)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Generalized double integral inequalities and their applications in studying the stability of nonlinear integro-differential systems with time delay
scientific article

    Statements

    Generalized double integral inequalities and their applications in studying the stability of nonlinear integro-differential systems with time delay (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    21 October 2013
    0 references
    A Gronwall type inequality for weighted iterated integrals is proved, a nonlinear autonomous superposition operator being allowed in the integral. More precisely, it is shown that an implicit inequality of the form \[ 0\leq u(t)\leq b(t)+\int_0^tf(t,s)\omega(u(s))+ \int_0^th(t,s)\omega(u(s))\int_0^sk(s,v)\omega(u(v))dv\,ds \] for \(u\) (with nonnegative given functions satisfying certain smoothness and monotonicity conditions) implies an explicit estimate for \(u(t)\) under some assumptions about some associated auxiliary quantities. The ``linear'' case \(\omega(u)=u\) is not excluded. The result is applied to show that differential equations with a delay tending to \(0\) as \(t\to0\) or integro-differential equations with such a delay are uniformly stable, provided the nonlinearities satisfy an ``integrable'' sublinear estimate \(\| f(t,x)\|\leq a(t)\| x\|\) with \(a\in L^1([0,\infty))\), or a similar estimate with an associated finite iterated integral, respectively.
    0 references
    Gronwall inequality
    0 references
    delay equation
    0 references
    a priori estimate
    0 references
    integral equation
    0 references
    integro-differential equation with delay
    0 references
    stability
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references