Existence Solutions for Implicit Fractional Relaxation Differential Equations with Impulsive Delay Boundary Conditions

: The aim of this paper is to study the existence and uniqueness of solutions for nonlinear fractional relaxation impulsive implicit delay differential equations with boundary conditions. Some ﬁndings are established by applying the Banach contraction mapping principle and the Schauder ﬁxed-point theorem. An example is provided that illustrates the theoretical results.


Introduction
A branch of mathematics known as fractional calculus looks into the characteristics of non-integer order derivatives and integrals (called fractional derivatives and integrals, briefly differintegrals). The idea and techniques for solving differential equations with fractional derivatives of the unknown function, often known as fractional differential equations, are a focus of this field. Many authors have studied the fractional differential equations (refer to [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]). Fractional differential equations provide an excellent tool for describing memory and inherited traits of several materials and processes. The benefits of fractional differential equations become apparent in modeling mechanical and electrical characteristics of actual materials, as well as in the description of rheological effects of rocks, and numerous fields. In [9][10][11], authors explained the applications of fractional differential equations.
Differential equations including impulse conditions have been widely analyzed in the literature. There has been a lot of interest in the research of these type of problems. The presence of solutions to several classes of fractional order implicit fractional differential equations with impulse conditions has gained a lot of attention recently (see references [12][13][14]).
Delay differential equations (DDEs) have emerged as a lively research area. It has emerged in applications as a model of equations. In DDEs, the past dictates how the system will evolve at a specific time instant. The life cycle stages, the interval between contagion and the new viruses' emergence, an infectious period, the immunological period, etc. are examples of hidden processes that are related to time delays and time lags in these models. ODEs simultaneously evaluate the unknown state and its derivatives. A differential model becomes substantially more complex when such time delays are added. Therefore, these models' stability and bifurcation analysis are critical for comprehending their qualitative behavior. These models have not undergone adequate sensitivity analysis or parameter identifiability investigations. In [15], Biao Zeng examined the fractional impulsive feedback control systems with finite delay. The authors studied the existence of impulsive neutral fractional differential equations with infinite delay in [16]. We could list certain publications related to fractional differential equations including state-dependent delay [17,18] and discrete delay [19].
Fractional differential equations are important in control, stellar interiors, star clusters, electrochemistry, viscoelasticity, and in optics. The impulsive conditions mount from the real-world problems to describe the dynamics of processes in which sudden, discontinuous jumps occur. In many fields of the life sciences, including population dynamics, immunology, epidemiology, neural networks, and physiology, modeling with DDEs is commonly employed. The entire process is seen in optimal control, electric circuits, neutral network, medicines, and so on. Because of the applications, we have included implicit, impulsive, and delay to our main problem.
In [20], S. Krim and others investigated the existence and uniqueness of solutions for the following Caputo-Hadamard implicit delay fractional differential equations with boundary conditions In [21], the authors studied the existence and uniqueness of positive solutions of the given non-linear fractional relaxation differential equation where LC D α is the Liouville-Caputo fractional derivative, α ∈ (0, 1]. By using the fixedpoint theorems and the method of the lower and upper solutions, the existence and uniqueness of solutions have been examined.
Motivated by the aforementioned works, by applying the Schauder and Banach fixedpoint theorems, we examine the existence and uniqueness of solutions for the following implicit fractional relaxation differential equation with impulsive delay conditions of the form where D β and LC D α are the R-L fractional derivative and L-C fractional derivative of orders β and α, respectively, 0 < α < 1, ζ ∈ C, 1 < β < 2, and f : represents the right and left limits of κ(τ) at τ = τ κ , respectively, and κ = 1, 2, ..., m. is the space of continuous functions that is, κ τ (.) represents the history of the state from time τ − h up to time τ.
We utilize the usual fixed-point theorem due to Schauder and Banach, is used to study the existence and uniqueness results. Finally, this work is strengthened by providing examples. The main novelty of this paper is focused with implicit and delay conditions. Basic results are discussed in preliminaries section. New findings are mentioned in the main results and the illustration is presented in the example section.

Preliminaries
This section introduces several terminologies, notations, and results related to fractional calculus.
Now we give out some fractional calculus results and properties.
Definition 1 ([10]). Let α > 0 be the fractional integral order of a function h : L → R is defined by given that the integral exists.
and D α 0 + is a fractional derivative in R-L sense of order α given by The Liouville-Caputo fractional derivative LC D α 0 + exists for κ belonging to AC m 1 (L). In this case, it is defined by Remark that when α = m 1 , we get LC D α h(τ) = h (m 1 ) (τ).

Lemma 1 ([10]
). Let α > 0 and m be the given by (2). If h ∈ AC m (L, R), then where h (j) is the usual derivative of h of order j.

Lemma 4.
(Banach fixed-point theorem [7]). Let Ψ be a nonempty closed convex subset of a Banach space (S * , · ), and then any contraction mapping φ of Ψ into itself has a unique fixed point.

Lemma 5.
(Schauder fixed-point theorem [7]). Let Ψ be a nonempty bounded closed convex subset of a Banach space S * and φ : Ψ → Ψ be a continuous compact operator. Then has a fixed point in Ψ.
The subsequent lemma is required to get our conclusions.

Lemma 6 ([22]
). For any h ∈ C(L), then the problem is identical to the integral equation

Main Result
The following uses fixed point theorems to prove the problem's existence and uniqueness of the (1). The following hypotheses are required to get our results.
Thus, for each τ ∈ L, we get Thus, From (4), σ is a contraction. By the Banach contraction mapping theorem, σ has a fixed point that is the unique solution of the problem (1) on [−h, T]. This finishes the proof.

then (1) has at least one solution on [−h,T].
Proof. Take the operator σ : C → C. Let P > 0 such that Denote the ball B P = {κ ∈ C(L, R), κ C ≤ P }.
Consider that the operator σ : B P → B P fulfills all conditions of Lemma 3 . Three steps would be taken to present the proof.
Here, f , h, and h n are continuous and κ n − κ C → 0 as n → ∞ then by the Lebesgue-dominated convergence theorem Hence, σ is continuous.
As τ k−1 → τ k , we see that the right side of the above inequality tends to zero, and the convergence is not dependent on κ in B P . This implies σ(B P ) is equicontinuous. By the Arzela-Ascoli theorem, σ is compact. Thus, by the Lemma 5, we prove that σ has at least one fixed point κ ∈ B P , which is a solution of the problem (1) on [−h, T].
The conditions of Theorem 2 are fulfilled.