1. Introduction
Fractional integro-differential calculus provides effective tools for the study of applied mathematical problems in various fields of science, such as physics, mathematical biology, theory of financial markets and many others. A large number of mathematical models of various real processes have appeared in the scientific literature, described in terms of equations with fractional derivatives and integrals [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9]. At the same time, such equations are also of theoretical interest for the theory of differential equations and, therefore, have been the objects of research in a multitude of papers over the past few decades (see monographs [
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15] and the bibliographies therein).
In the theory of differential equations, a separate class consists of degenerate evolution equations, the special properties of which are entailed by the presence of a degenerate operator at the highest-order derivative. Various classes of degenerate evolution equations of an integer order have been studied by many authors [
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22]. Degenerate evolution equations with Gerasimov–Caputo, Riemann–Liouville and Dzhrbashyan–Nersesyan fractional derivatives were studied in [
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28,
29].
In the present work, we study the unique solvability of a special initial value problem in the degenerate multi-term linear equation
      
      with the Gerasimov–Caputo derivatives 
, 
, the Riemann–Liouville integrals 
, 
 and the linear operators 
, which act from a Banach space 
 into a Banach space 
, 
. Here, 
, where some of 
 may be negative, 
, 
, 
 and 
. The unique solvability of the Cauchy problem in such an equation with bounded operators 
 in the nondegenerate case (
, 
) was proven in [
30]. In [
31], the Cauchy problem was researched for nondegenerate Equation (
1) under the more general condition 
 on linear, closed, densely defined operators 
.
In the study of degenerate equations of the form 
 and 
, the conditions for the pair of operators 
 are often used, entailing the existence of the so-called pairs of invariant subspaces. We are talking about the representation of two Banach spaces in the form of the direct sums of the subspaces 
 and 
, for which 
 and there exist operators 
 and 
, where 
, 
 and 
. The direct sums correspond to the projectors 
P along 
 on 
 and 
Q along 
 on 
. Such an approach was used in [
21] with the condition of an 
-bounded operator and 
 and in [
25] with the condition 
 for some 
, 
. This makes it possible to reduce the degenerate equation to a system of two simpler equations on two subspaces. A generalization of this approach to the case of three or more operators 
 for degenerate equations is not evident, since in this case, we need to work with a pencil of operators 
, and the standard technique does not look applicable due to the presence of several fractional powers of the parameter 
. However, the same conditions can be used for a pair of operators 
 if the action of the remaining operators 
 is coordinated with the subspaces 
, 
, 
 and 
. The simplest variant of such a coordination is the equality 
, implying that 
, 
 and 
. This is how multi-term degenerate Equation (
1) with bounded operators 
 was investigated in [
30], namely by reducing to the system of two simpler equations on two subspaces under the condition of 
-boundedness of the operator 
. In this paper, when studying Equation (
1) with unbounded operators 
, a condition 
 [
25] is used that allows us to obtain pairs of invariant subspaces. At the same time, the coordination of the other operators 
 has a general form 
 with some bounded operators 
, where 
.
In the second section, the preliminaries are given, including theorems on unique solvability of the Cauchy problem for two classes of nondegenerate (
, 
) multi-term equations (Equation (
1)) with the Gerasimov–Caputo derivatives, where one of them has bounded operators 
 [
30], and for the other one, the condition 
 is satisfied, which implies the existence of analytic resolving families of the operators [
31]. In the third section, the theorem on the existence of a unique solution to the problem
      
      for the degenerate multi-term Equation (
1) is proven under conditions 
 and 
 with some bounded operators 
, where 
. To this aim, Equation (
1) is reduced to a system of two nondegenerate multi-term equations on the subspaces of two classes, which are described in the second section. Abstract results are applied to the study of unique solvability issues for the initial boundary value problems of some systems of the dynamics of viscoelastic fluids in the framework of the abstract, non-degenerate multi-term equation and for the system of the thermoconvection for the Kelvin–Voigt fluid as a degenerate, multi-term equation in a Banach space.
  2. Preliminaries
We define the Riemann–Liouville fractional integral of the order 
 [
12,
14] as follows:
Let 
, 
 be the derivative of the order 
 and 
 be the fractional Gerasimov–Caputo derivative of the order 
 [
14,
32]:
For , by defintion, we will mean . Hereafter, with  for , we denote the limit .
Let  and  be Banach spaces, denoting with  the Banach space of all linear bounded operators acting from  into  and with  the set of all linear closed operators acting on  with a dense domain in . We also denote  and , for  and for , while ,  is the set of  such that  is injective mapping and , . We will assume that .
  2.1. Theorem on Pairs of Invariant Subspaces
Definition 1. [
32]. 
An operator  belongs to the class  if(1) there exist  and  such that for all , we have  and
(2) 
for every , , there exists a constant  such that, for all , we have Definition 2. [
25]. 
Let . A pair  belongs to the class  if(1) there exist  and  such that, for all , we have , and
(2) 
for every , , there exists a constant  such that, for all , we have Remark 1. In the case of the inverse operator  existing, we have  if and only if  and .
 From the pseudo-resolvent identity, which is valid for  and for  separately, it follows that the subspaces ,  and ,  do not depend on . We introduce the denotations  and . With  (), we denote the closure of the image  () in the norm of the space  (). With  (), the restriction of the operator L (M) on  () will be denoted, where .
Theorem 1. [
25]. 
Let the Banach spaces  and  be reflexive, where . Then, the following are true:
 - (1)
-  and  
- (2)
- The projection P(Q) on the subspace  () along  () has the form   
- (3)
- ,  and  
- (4)
- There exist inverse operators  and  
- (5)
-  and  
- (6)
-  and  
- (7)
- Let . Then,  is dense in  
- (8)
- Let . Then,  is dense in  
- (9)
- If  or , then , and moreover,  
- (10)
- If  or , then , and aside from that, . 
  2.2. Nondegenerate Multi-Term Equation
Let 
, 
, 
, 
. Some of 
 may be negative. Consider the Cauchy problem
        
        for a linear multi-term fractional differential equation
        
        where the operators 
 have domains 
, 
 and 
. A solution to problem (
2), (
3) is a function 
, for which 
, 
, and conditions (
2) and equality (
3) for all 
 hold.
We denote ,  and endow the set D with the norm , with respect to which D is a Banach space, since it is the intersection of the Banach spaces  with the corresponding graph norms.
We also denote  for . If the set  is empty for some  (it is valid if and only if ), then we apply :
Definition 3. A tuple of operators  belongs to the class  at some ,  if the following are true:
(1) D is dense in 
(2) For all , , there exist operators 
(3) 
For any , , there exists such a  that for all , , Remark 2. If , then by the definition, 
 Remark 3. In [31], the same class  of tuples of operators is denoted by , since in that case, r operators at a negative  value were grouped separately.  Remark 4. It is easy to show that in the case  for some  the condition  is satisfied if and only if .
 We denote at 
 that
        
        where 
, 
, 
, 
, 
 and 
.
In [
31], it is shown that there exist resolving families of operators 
, 
 of the homogeneous Equation (
3) (
) if and only if 
. Therein, the following unique solvability theorem was proved for the Cauchy problem in the inhomogeneous equation:
Theorem 2. [
31]. 
Let , , , , , ,  and . Then, there exists a unique solution to problem (2), (3), and it has the form In the case of bounded operators 
, an analogous result was obtained in [
30]:
Theorem 3. [
30]. 
Let , , , , , ,  and . Then, there exists a unique solution to problem (2), (3), and it has form (4).   3. An Initial Value Problem for a Degenerate Equation
Suppose that ,  and  and that  and  are domains of the operators , respectively, with the respective graph norms .
Let Banach spaces 
 and 
 be reflexive, 
, 
, 
, 
, 
 and 
. Some of 
 may be negative. Consider the initial value problem
      
      for a multi-term fractional linear inhomogeneous equation
      
      which is called degenerate in the case where 
. The projector 
P is defined in Theorem 1.
A solution to problem (
5), (
6) is a function 
 such that 
, 
, 
, 
, Equality (
6) for all 
 and conditions (
5) are valid.
Lemma 1. Let  for some , where  and . Then, for every , , there exists  such that  Proof.  Take 
, 
, 
 and 
 in the sense of the principal branch of the power function. Then, 
, since 
. Hence, we have
        
Analogously, we can obtain a similar inequality for .    □
 For a negative , we can obtain a similar result:
Lemma 2. Let  for some , where  and . Then, for every , where , there exists  such that  Proof.  Since , for ,  and , we have . The remaining part of the proof is the same as for the previous lemma.    □
 We denote for brevity that , ,  () is the restriction of L () on  (on  for ), where . Due to Theorem 1  for ,  for , and hence  and , where . That aside, there exist  and .
Theorem 4. Let  and  be reflexive Banach spaces, , , , ,  and . Then,  for some , .
 Proof.  Since 
, by Theorem 1 (10), we have 
, where 
. Due to Lemma 1 for 
 or Lemma 2 in the case where 
 for some 
, 
 and 
, we have
        
        for some 
, and hence
        
□
 Theorem 5. Let  and  be reflexive Banach spaces, , ,  for some , , , , , , ,  for  and  for . Then, there exists a unique solution to problem (5), (6).  Proof.  Note that  for . Establish that , , and then . Thus, for , we have .
Using the operator 
, problem (
5), (
6) can be written as the system
        
        with the initial conditions
        
In the considered case 
 with the graph norm of the operator 
, since 
, then 
 for 
. Hence, through Theorem 2, there exists a unique solution to problem (
7), (
9). Problem (
8), (
10) have a unique solution due to Theorem 3, since the operators 
, 
 are bounded and 
 is a known function.    □
 Remark 5. The proof of Theorem 5 implies that the Cauchy problem ,  for Equation (6) has a unique solution under the additional conditions ,  only. Here, w is a unique solution to problem (8), (10).    4. Some Initial Value Problems for Viscoelastic Media Systems
Consider the initial boundary value problem
      
      in a bounded region 
 with a smooth boundary 
, 
, 
, 
, where some of numbers 
 may be negative. Here, 
 is a fractional Gerasimov–Caputo derivative of the order 
 (or fractional Riemann–Liouville integral of the order 
 in the case where 
) with respect to 
t, the velocity 
 and the pressure gradient 
 are unknown, and 
 is a given function.
If 
, 
 and 
, then the system of Equations (
13) and (
14) is the linearization for the generalized Oskolkov system of the viscoelastic fluid dynamics with the kernel 
 in the integral operator (see system (2.1.1), (2.1.2) in [
33]). With 
, 
, 
 and 
, it will be the linearized Kelvin–Voigt fluid system [
34,
35]. If, moreover, 
, then (
13), (
14) is the linearized system of the Scott-Blair fluid dynamics.
With , , , the closure of the subspace  in the norm of the space  will be denoted by , and in the norm of , it will be denoted by . We denote , where  is the orthogonal complement for  in  and ,  are the corresponding orthoprojectors.
The operator 
, extended to a closed operator in 
 with the domain 
, has a real negative discrete spectrum with finite multiplicities, which is condensed only at 
 [
36].
The system of Equations (
13) and (
14) is equivalent to the equation
      
      since
      
Therefore, we need to study problem (
11), (
12), (
15). If 
, 
, 
, 
 and 
. Due to incompressibility Equation (
14) take 
, 
, 
 and 
 are closed, densely defined operators. Then, by Lemma 3 from [
31], 
, and by Theorem 2, for any 
, 
, there exist a unique solution to problem (
11), (
12), (
15). Therefore, problem (
11)–(
14) also have a unique solution.
If 
, 
 and 
, we rewrite Equation (
15) into the form
      
      for 
 By setting 
, 
, 
 and 
, and by Theorem 3, since 
 are bounded operators, for any 
, 
, there exist a unique solution to problem (
11)–(
14).
Now, consider the initial boundary value problem
      
      for the linearized system of the thermoconvection in the same medium
      
      where 
, 
, 
 and ▵ is the Laplace operator with the domain 
, which is dense in 
.
Remark 6. If , then system of Equations (19)–(21) is the linear approximation of the thermoconvection in viscous media and not in viscoelastic media. In part, for ,  and , we have the linearization of the Boussinesq system, which models the thermoconvection in viscous media. Operator methods close to the methods of this work are used for studying an initial boundary value problem and some control problems of the linearized Boussinesq system in [
37].
  Here,  is the projector . Then, ,  and . We have , where .
Lemma 3. Let , , , , , spaces  and  have form (22), and operators L and  be defined by (23). Then,  for some , , and in this case, we havewhere , ,  and .  Proof.  The Banach spaces 
 and 
 are reflexive since they are Hilbert spaces. The operators 
, 
 and 
 are bounded. Therefore, we can choose 
, 
 such that the disc 
 is situated outside the sector 
. Then, for 
, using the Neumann series, we obtain
        
Now, we take 
, 
 and 
. Then, 
 for all 
, since 
 and the spectrum of the operator 
 is real and negative. Moreover, for 
, we have
        
        where 
 is the inner product in 
, 
 is the eigenvalues of ▵ and 
 is the orthonormal system of the corresponding eigenfunctions.
Thus, for 
, we have
        
Thus, 
 and 
. Using inequalities (
24)–(
26), we obtain that 
.
For , the proof is similar..
The projectors P and Q and subspaces , ,  and  can be calculated using Theorem 1 (2):    □
 Remark 7. It is evident that in this case, .
 Theorem 6. Let , , , , , ,  and  for , and ,  for ,  and . Then, there exist a unique solution to problem (16)–(21).  Proof.  We reduce problem (
16)–(
21) to problem (
5), (
6) with 
, using operators (
23) in spaces (
22). Note that in this case, 
, 
 and 
. Hence, conditions (
5) have the form 
 for 
, 
 and 
 for 
, which are equivalent to conditions (
16) and (
17) due to the form of the projector 
P (see Lemma 3). Here, 
 for 
 and 
 for 
. Therefore, for 
, the second condition in (
16) and in (
17) is absent.
According to Remark 7, 
, and moreover, 
. Hence, 
 under the conditions of the present theorem. We also have 
. Finally, we have
        
It is obvious that . Under Theorem 5, we obtain the required statement.    □
   5. Conclusions
An initial value problem for a class of degenerate multi-term linear equations in Banach spaces with Gerasimov–Caputo derivatives was studied by the methods of pairs of invariant subspaces. Under the conditions of the operators at the two oldest derivatives, by implying the existence of pairs of invariant subspaces and analytic resolving families of operators for the linear homogeneous equation with these two operators, we reduced the degenerate equation to a system of two nondegenerate equations in the subspaces. This allowed us to prove the existence of a unique solution. The obtained abstract unique solvability theorem was used for the research of the initial boundary value problems for the systems of the dynamics and of the thermoconvection of the Kelvin–Voigt-type media.
As for the development of the results obtained and their significance, we note that the results for the solvability of initial problem (
5), (
6) will further allow us to consider other problems for Equation (
6) (boundary value problems on a segment, nonlocal problems, etc.). Aside from that, the proof of the solvability theorem (Theorem 5), coupled with solution formula (
4) for the nondegenerate equation, gives the form of a solution to the degenerate equation, which can become a starting point for finding new methods for the numerical solutions of initial boundary value problem (
16)–(
21).