In this section, our main results are stated and proved.
  3.1. The Existence of the Attractor
This subsection is devoted to the study of the existence and uniqueness of attractors for GIFSs on 
b-metric spaces. The proofs are similar in spirit to those given in [
6].
Lemma 2. Let  be a b-metric space and  for . If  is a φ-contraction, then
 Proof.  For any , since f is a φ-contraction and φ is nondecreasing, we have
 Let 
 be a 
b-metric space. Consider a mapping 
 and let 
 be given by
        
 for all 
.
It can be easily verified that k is nonexpansive whenever f is nonexpansive.
Theorem 4. Let  be a complete b-metric space. If  is a φ-contraction, then f has a unique fixed point, i.e., there exists a unique  such that . Moreover, if for , we let , , then the sequence  converges to α.
 Proof.  Let  be the map defined by  for all . Then, since g is a φ-contraction, by Theorem 2, we infer that there exists a unique  such that
 We see that f is nonexpansive, since , for all  with . Hence, k is also nonexpansive.
Consider 
. Let 
 and for 
, define
            
Note that
            
 so, by induction, we obtain
            
 and similarly,
            
 for all 
. We see that
            
 so 
 and likewise 
 From the fact that 
k is nonexpansive, it follows that
            
 therefore, in view of Lemma 2, we deduce that
            
 so 
 is a φ-contraction and thus a Picard operator. By Lemma 1, this implies that k is Picard. Therefore, there exists uniquely 
 such that
            
 so 
Using the definition of 
, we deduce that
            
 and 
 for 
. Finally, since 
k is Picard, it then follows that
            
 and we conclude that 
. □
Lemma 3. Let  and  be two b-metric spaces. If  is a φ-contraction, then the set function  given by  for any  is also a φ-contraction (with the same φ), i.e.,for all .  Proof.  Let us first show that  for any bounded subset . This follows from the following two observations.
 By the definition of infimum, there exists a sequence 
 such that 
. Since 
 and φ is nondecreasing, we have that 
 for all 
, therefore 
, and
            
There exists a sequence 
 such that 
. Since 
 for all 
 and φ is upper semicontinuous, we have
            
 so 
By (
1) and (
2), we deduce that 
 for any bounded 
.
Now, let 
 and 
. On account of the above remark, we have
            
 which implies that 
 so 
By a similar argument, we can prove that
            
 thus 
□
Lemma 4. If  is a b-metric space, thenfor all .  Proof.  The justification of this claim is based on the definition of the Hausdorff–Pompeiu b-metric and the following two facts: 
 and 
 for any bounded subsets 
.
Let us prove (
3). One can prove (
4) in much the same way. Fix 
,...,
. Then
            
 for all 
, hence 
, so
            
If it were true that 
 there would be 
 such that 
This means that , so we find  satisfying , and so .
This implies that
            
 which is impossible. Therefore, (
3) must be true.
We now proceed to show that
            
 for all 
. Observe that if 
, then
            
 which leads to 
 implying that 
The same reasoning can be used to conclude that
            
           and the proof is complete. □
 Corollary 1. Let  be a b-metric space and  a GIFS of order m on X. If each ,  is a φ-contraction, then  is a φ-contraction (with the same φ).
 Proof.  We have
            
 for all 
.
 Combining Theorem 4 and Corollary 1, we obtain the following result.
Theorem 5. If  is a complete b-metric space and  is a GIFS of order m on X, then there exists a unique  such that . Moreover, for any , the following sequence of iteratesconverges to  with respect to the Hausdorff–Pompeiu b-metric h.    3.2. The Continuous Dependence of the Attractor on Parameters
In this subsection, we present a theorem concerning the continuous dependence of the attractor of a GIFS on parameters.
Theorem 6 ([
18]). 
Let  be a b-metric space,  be a compact metric space and denote by  the family of all continuous functions from K to X. Then -  (i) 
-  is a b-metric space, wherefor all . 
-  (ii) 
- If  is complete and d is lower semicontinuous, then  is complete. 
We omit the proof of the following lemma since it is identical to that from the metric case.
Lemma 5. Let  and  be b-metric spaces and . Then, f is continuous if and only if  is continuous for any compact subset .
 Following the steps of Theorem 3.2 in [
19], we prove the following result.
Proposition 3. Let  be a complete b-metric space and suppose that d is lower semicontinuous. If ,  is a sequence of φ-contractions (with the same φ) that converges pointwise to a function , then f is a φ-contraction (with the same φ), and the sequence of fixed points of  converges to the fixed point of f.
 Proof.  We have 
 for all 
 and 
, so
            
 Since 
d is lower semicontinuous and
            
 we can assert that
            
Let α be the unique fixed point of f and  be the unique fixed point of , where . We want to prove that .
Set 
. Note that Λ endowed with the usual distance becomes a metric space. Define 
 by
            
 for all 
. Note that 
 for all 
. Let 
 be defined by
            
 for all 
. We shall have completed the proof if we prove that l is continuous, because
            
Fix a nonempty compact subset 
. By Lemma 5, it suffices to prove that l is continuous on Ω. Let 
 be defined by 
 for all 
 and 
. Since F is continuous in the first variable and nonexpansive in the second variable, F is continuous. Indeed, this follows from
            
 for all 
 and 
. Consequently, 
 for any 
.
Now, for 
 and 
, we have
            
 thus 
 i.e., T is a φ-contraction. By Theorem 6, we know that 
 is complete. Accordingly, there exists a unique 
 such that
            
 thus 
 for any 
, which implies that 
. Since 
 is continuous, we infer that 
 is continuous, hence, in view of Lemma 5, l is continuous. □
Corollary 2. Let  be a complete b-metric space and suppose that d is lower semicontinuous. If ,  is a sequence of φ-contractions (with the same φ) that converges pointwise to , then f is also a φ-contraction (with the same φ) and the sequence of fixed points of  converges to the fixed point of f.
 Proof.  Since 
 is a φ-contraction, for every 
, we have that
            
 hence 
 for all 
. Since 
 and 
d is lower semicontinuous, we have 
 for all 
, so f is a φ-contraction.
Define  by  and  for any  and . Since g and  are φ-contractions, by Theorem 1, we infer that there exist uniquely  such that  and  for all . Now, using Proposition 3, we deduce that . □
 Lemma 6. Let  and  be two complete b-metric spaces such that ρ is lower semicontinuous. If ,  is a sequence of φ-contractions (with the same φ) that converges pointwise to  on a dense subset of X, then  converges uniformly on compact sets to f.
 Proof.  As in the proof of Proposition 3, we obtain that f is a φ-contraction, so
            
 for all .
Set  and note that . Let  be a compact set and . Since K is compact, by Theorem 1, we know that there exist  and  such that .
Since , there exist  with  for all .
Since  for all , we can find  such that  for all , if .
Let 
. Choose 
 such that 
. For any 
, we have
            
 which means that 
 converges uniformly to f on K. □
Lemma 7. Let  be a complete b-metric space and suppose that d is lower semicontinuous. If ,  are φ-contractions (with the same φ) such that  converges uniformly to f on compact sets, thenfor any .  Proof.  We have
            
 for all 
. □
 Lemma 8. Let  be a complete b-metric space such that d is lower semicontinuous. Then, the Hausdorff–Pompeiu b-metric h is also lower semicontinuous.
 Proof.  Let  and  such that  and . We will prove that
 We begin by proving that 
 for any 
. By the definition of the Hausdorff–Pompeiu b-metric, for any 
, there exists 
 such that
            
 so 
. For any 
 we can find 
 such that
            
Since 
 and 
, by the s-relaxed triangle inequality, we deduce that the sequence 
 is bounded, so there exists 
 such that 
. From the above, it follows that
            
for all .
We can choose 
, with 
 such that
            
Since 
, there exists a subsequence 
 and 
 such that
            
Then, from
            
 we deduce that 
Now, using the fact that d is lower semicontinuous, it follows that
            
 so 
 leading to 
.
In the same manner, one can prove that  hence,  which is our claim. □
Theorem 7. Let  be a complete b-metric space such that d is lower semicontinuous. If  and , , are GIFSs of order m on X such that  converges pointwise to  on a dense subset of  for any , then,with respect to the Hausdorff–Pompeiu b-metric h.  Proof.  Combining Lemmas 6–8, we obtain
            
 for all 
. By Corollary 2, we deduce that 
. □